Evening Star Newspaper, October 10, 1936, Page 3

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. DR.E.B. JORDAN OF C. U ELEVATED Educator Is Made Domestic Prelate to Pope Pius, With Title of Monsignor. Elevation of Rev. Dr. Edward Benedict Jordan, acting dean of the Catholic Sisters’ College and associaie professor of education at Catholic Uni- versity, to the rank of domestic prelate to his holiness Pope Pius XI, with the title of monsignor, was announced today. Dr. Jordan is known throughout the Uniled States in both Catholic and secular circles for his work in the field of educa- tion. He is a reg- ular ccntributor to the Catholic Education Review, and has served on numerous com- mittees dealing with educational move. ments. The announcement of his elevation was made through the university Ly Most Rev. Thomas C. O'Reilly, Bishop of Scranton, Pa. Dr. Jordan was ap- pointed acting dean of the Sisters’ College last May 21, succeeding Right Rev. Patrick J. McCormick, who had been named vice rector of the uni- versity. Dr. Jordan, born in Dunmore, Pa., took his bachelor of science degree from St. Thomas College, Scranton, in 1903 and his bachelor of arts de- gree from Mount St. Mary's College, Emmitsburg. Md., in 1905. He then entered the Propaganda University in Rome, from which he received his Dr. Jordan. 1909. He was ordained in Rome on April 10, 1909, Returning to this country, he be- came a teacher of biology and edu- | cation at Mount St. Mary's, serving in that capacity from 1910 to 1921. Between 1919 and 1920 he also served as vice president of the college. as instructor in education and was advanced in rank to associate pro- fessor in 1926. Since 1921 he has been a Mdecturer in psychology at Trinity College. In 1930 he was named secretary of the College of Arts and Sciences at C. U. When he went to the university in 1921 Dr. Jordan was named secretary of Sisters’ College. He made his first public appearance as acting dean of the college at the forty-seventh an- nual commencement of the university last June 10. No date has been set for the inves- ture of Dr. Jordan with the robes of his new office. —— g, Greece Cotton Country. For the first time Greece is produc- Ing nearly enough cotton for its do- mestic consumption. LOST. BOSTON TERRIER—Black Reward A Ashmead pl_1.s HAT—Lady's small black velour. Blue Bell. Conn. ave. and 1oth st. 10474, Apt_ 108 ISH ' SETTER—Large. reddish _brown. wn collar and tag: “Ginger.’ Reward. Adams 9548 KIT BAG—Brown; contamng clothing. Phone R._K._Miller. Natl. 4703. Reward KNITTING YARN and needles in bag: lost in “downtown dept. store on Thursday. Re 08 A e and white. smail 5. North 8122, between North ball fas Reward, Wisconsin 39 KETBOOK—Lady’s. black: money. ey, compact: on highway between Bei Alton and La Plata. Md. Reward. Na- tional 2942 dy's. 7 _between Reward. W vellow gold. diamond 22nd’ a ?1st on K nd st. n.w. e 10% 8 E DOG. black._lost 1 block of ist sl. n.w. Reward. Covle, Georgia 4817 SERVICE REVOLVER, 607312, properiy et. Police Dept.. vicinity Fla. ave. and st. n.w. Reward. Return No. 2 tinct. SLEEPING BAG_Lost_between W, on_and Laytonville. Md.; bet. 9-10 p.m. ednesday. _Reward $10. Potomac 419 TAN BEAN SLEEPING BAG. between Wash- :l;,llu;l and L;:‘i:cmsvllleél Md.. between 9 m. ) reward. Pot 7. Biitnershuri 4-pog o Fotomac 419 om 4900 Call Bill SPECIAL NOTICES. OCTOBER 28. AT EICHBERG'S AUC- sion, 1327 R st. e bilis_ and Fepairs Graham sedan. motor 6199; Graham sedan, 10773 Oldsmobil F-170691: Gra- am-Paige sedan. 9 dan. F-144686 C. & M. GARAGE, 1724 Kalorama rd. n.w. §. WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ebts contracted by ‘any one other than elf. HORACE ‘G, ANDERSON, Span- il 0_You st._n.w. = SFFECTIVE TODAY, 1 WILL NOT BE RE- ponsible for any bills unless contractea y me personally. JEROME ROSEN, 06 Quackenbos st. n.w. 'VING LOADS AND PART AILY TRIPS, M ds to_and from Balto. Phila. and New other Eastern ork. Frequent trips to g!lu. “Dependable Bervice Since 1896.” DAVIDSON TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. _Phone Decatur _2500. PREE—BAND AND GRAVEL MIXTURE table for roadwaya rough concrete, fill iven_free at IND OTTA Blair rd. and_Underwood st. WEATHER STRIPPING tops drafts. dust and leaking BERVILLE! 117 11th st, s.e. g s URI ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM, Mile from Rockville, Md., on Potol Rd. hrn Left 2 Blocks W " Court House: MOVING TO FLORIDA. WoRSpibMINAL AN N 100 "PLAINFIELD ORCHARDS Sweet Cider and Apples. Grimes Golden. Delicious, Stayman Wine- saps. Sandy Ba)flw. Md.. on Glenmont~ Bandy Spring rd.. W. W. MOORE. __11°* A DEAL FUNERAL AT $75 ides same service as one ot e s oo e 4y Jfiz:&"’ 25 yvears' experience. be en A Sunflower Luncheon :',‘é: : ln. rtakers _in SR R s b o, v, Commbia 0433 5 se tlantie 6700 Sweet Cider and Apples AT QUAINT ACRES, Sitver Epring, Colesviile Pike (Route 20). ©F SPERfs § miles from D. C. _Open_every day from 7 am. 5 7 pm. TO THE POLICYHOLDERS OF P THE PRUDENTIAL ENSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA NOTICE is hereby given that a meeting of policyholders of THE PRUDENTIAL SURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA will be held at the Home Office of said Com- y, in the City of Newark, New Jersey, on y, day of December, 1936, at twelve o'clock noon, for the purpose of persons to be voted for by the Trustees as members of the ng eyholders’ of Directors at the annual election of rectors of the Company to be held th day of January, 1937. At such meeting every policyholder of the ‘worporation who is of the age of twenty-one or upwards and whose policy ias been L7 ED 1th | Elliott Roosevelt’s Defense bachelor of sacred theology degree in | He | went to Catholic University in 1921 | n.w. we will sell for stor- |* w. | established to transport them. NG “STAR, ‘WASHINGTON, D. C.. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1936. REU ER[]SS DRWE VlRGINlA SWINGS Boston Sack Murder Figures J. Edgar-Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation, is shown at the Willard Hotel as he renewed his Red Cross membershil Swanson, wife o, in response to the appeal of Mrs. Claude A, the Secretary of Navy. Mrs. Swanson is in charge of one of the downtown booths set up to enroll members in the current campaign. CLARK CRITICISM ANSWEREDBY NYE of Release of Probe Data Is Cited. By the Assoclated Press. GALESBURG, Ill, October 10.— Senator Gerald P. Nye, Republican, of North Dakota, chairman of the Sen- ate Munitions Committee, last night made public a telegram replymng to Senator Bennett C. Clark, Democrat, of Missouri, who said yesterday he was “amazed” that Senator Nye dis- closed certain documents concerning an unfilled contract involving Elliott | Roosevelt, son of the President. Senator Nye declined to discuss fur- ther the contract matter, which con- cerned the younger Roosevelt and Anthony H. G. Fokker, airplane de- signer. The Senator was here to address a Western Illinois teachers’ convention. The North Dakotan's reply to Clark, who had called Nye's action “a cheap political trick,” follows: “In light of our close co-operation and understanding during the two years of conduct of the munitions in- dustry investigation you will know that your telegram of yesterday car-| ried a personal sting. I had expected that my telegram of Wednesday to | all members of the committee, includ- ing yourself, would give understanding of my purpose in releasing the Fokker | affidavit, which release was clearly undertaken under my own responsi- bility and not that of the committee as such. “I had hoped that you most cer- tainly would understand its purpose, and even dared to guess that you would have done the same thing if your contact with the matter had been as was mine at the moment. I am sorry to have wmisjudged in this, if I did, though I am still of the mind that the right thing was done ourselves and others concerned | by releasing the matter. “I can only hope time will prove that the course was justified in the interests of fair play and that ulti- mately you will concur with Elliott Roosevelt himself, who is quoted in the press as saying ‘Chairman Nye did exactly the right thing. If I were in Mr. Nye's position and some one accused me of withholding facts from the public I would certainly release whatever sworn matter was in my hands.’” SCHOOL BUS FUND USED TO RESUME TEACHING Garrett County Board ., Hires Teacher for Fort Hill, Which Figured in “Strike.” By tne Assoctated Press. OAKLAND, Md., October 10.—The Garrett County Board of Education managed to open one of four schools which figured in a “strike” at the be- ginning of this year by using a State allotment for pupil-transportation for the salary of a teacher. The school is the one-room one at Fort Hill. The other schools involved in the strike were Meadow Mountain, Dry Run and Walnut Bottom. Pupils of the Fort Hill school were trans- ferred to North Glade and a bus line However, the increased enrollment at North Glade was sufficient to warrant another teacher and another school room, which were not available. Under this condition, the State Board of Education gave permission to use the bus funds, furnished by the State, for paying a teacher in the re-opened Fort Hill school. Radio Aids Plane, Lostin Heavy Fog, To Land in Safety Transport Lands by Auto Light at Portsmouth, Ohio. By the Associated Press. PORTSMOUTH, Ohio, October 10.— ‘Those campanion modernities, electric lights and radio, with the help of scores of local residents, won a tense battle last night for five men in another modern invention,- a large airplane, lost in murky weather over the Ohio River. Edward Harrington, one of three co- pilots, said if weather permitted the party would take off today to return home to New York, and would not continue to Cincihnati, where they were bound when their gasoline supply dwindled and radio directional beam apparatus failed. ,The huge transport plane lost when apparently but 20 miles short of Cincinnati and was advised by the Columbus office of an airline to return to Portsmouth, 90 miles away. A score of automobiles were sent to Portsmouth airport by Sherift Arthup Oakes and their lights outlined, the fleld to permit a perfect landing. —A P. Photo. Father Divine’s Followers to Vote Under Holy Names By the Assoctated Press. NEW YORK, October 10.—If the followers of Father Divine want to be known in the polling places as Beacon Light, Flowery Bed of Peace or Tree of Life no one shall say them nay. Supreme Court Justice William T. Collins’ ruling granting the “angels” of the Harlem heaven the right to register under their spiritual names was published to- day. Two hundred galy clad dis- ciples of the colored leader greet- ed the ruling with a laugh and a hurrah. FILENE FOR BOOST IN BUYING POWER Co-operative Congress Told Poverty in Modern Amer- ica Is Absurd. By the Assoctated Press. COLUMBUS, Ohio, October 10.— The Tenth Biennial Congress of the Co-operative League of the U, S. A. headed toward adjournment today with this advice from Edward A. Fi- lene, millionaire Boston merchant: “Our object must be so to ove and perfect the distributfoh that the people of these United States may be enabled to consume according to their capacity to produce.” Buying Power Important. Filene, a leader in the co-operative consumer movement, asserted that American business never would enjoy lasting prosperity until the masses of would-be consumers obtained “greater and greater buying power.” “Our job,” he said of the co-oper- ators, “is to learn to distribute with less waste and less lost motion than in the best of the solely profit-seeking organizations and, by our successful competition, compel them to discover and to inaugurate still more efficient methods. “Poverty in modern America is ab- surd. * * * We have sufficient re- sources, sufficient machinery, sufficient power and sufficient skilled manage- ment to provide every American fam- ily with economic security and such a standard of living as no people have known before.” Increased Production. ‘The buying power of 1926 and 1929 is not sufficient to maintain pros- perity in 1937, Filene said, “because the people generally are able to pro- duce so much more than they could 10 years ago.” Asserting that advertising brings rich returns to business men, he added co-operatives would find that “truth- ful, courageous advertising, instead of adding to the cost of distribution, will so add to its volume as to bring the cost per item down.” Seek Stupid For Ruler. The Russians have an old story of the city of Glupov, Fool City, where the people were such fools that they were not content until they found some one to rule them who was more stupid than they were themselves, REACHES 37,556 Campaigners Strive to Over- come Handicaps of Bad Weather. Red Oross campaigners strove today to overcome the handicap of bad weather and get enough memberships to close the second and next-to-last week of the current drive with an enrollment approximating the 43,000 figure attained last year. Sixty-five thousand members must be signed by next Friday midnight to put the roll call over the top. ‘When campaign headquarters at 1416 H street closed last night, audi- tors counted 3,901 memberships re- ported during the day, placing total enrollment at 37,556. Enrollment at booths established in midweek at downtown locations increased 50 per cent, bringing memberships obtained by this unit to 535. Records Established. The Government solicitation unit surpassed the best record of the next highest campaign division by nearly 26,000. Totals are: Government, 28,- 300; utilities, 1,317; professional, 1,775; general business, 1,760; residential, 709, and miscellaneous, 966. ‘The first large division to exceed its quota was reported last night. It was the Financial Committee, under Robert Fleming, president of Riggs National Bank. This unit, although not finished its work, has signed up 2,191 members. Forty-three of the 203 firms listed in Fleming’s commit- tee were enrolled 100 per cent. Reports of satisfactory progress in the general business group were made last night at a meeting in the Uni- versity Club. John Saul, chairman of this division; Lloyd B. Wilson, gen- eral chairman of the roll call, and P. O. Coffin, vice chairman, attended. 100 Per Cent Firms. Among the firms reporting 100 per cent in the financial group are the Bank of Commerce & Savings, Se- curity, Savings & Commercial Bank; Washington Loan & Trust Co., West End Branch; Boss & Phelps, L. E. Breuninger & Sons, Columbia Perma- nent Building Association, Floyd E. Davis Co., District Building & Loan Association, Thomas J. Fisher Co., Thomas E. Jarrell Co., Perpetual Building Association, H. G. Smithy Co., Metropolis Building Association, Pey- ser & Dreyfus, J. B. Donnelly, F. Eliot Middleton, Washington Perma- nent Building Association, Arms & Drury, John D. Babbage & Co., Y. E. Booker & Co., Harriman Brown & | Co.. Financial Distributors Corp., Wililam J. Flather, Inc.; Folger, Nolan & Co.: Frear & Co., A. S. Goulden & Co., Hall, national Bank, Lommis, Sayles & Co.; Mahew & Reily; E. H. Rollins & Sons, Inc.; Berkshire Life Insurance Co., Fire Companies Adjustment Bureau, Guardian Life Insurance Co., Home | Insurance Co. of New York, Legg, Grif- fin & Co., Inc.; Life Insurance Co. of Virginia, Mutual Benefit Life In- surance of New York, National Life Insurance of New York and United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. SR LA Italy (Continued From First Page.) increase in the aviation enlistments “proceeds regularly.” In shipyards, he asserted, “there are at present under construction sev- eral score warships.” Contracts have been let and work will be begun this month, II Duce reported, for construction of new air- ports in the valley of the Po River. $7,000,000 Total Cost. The total cost, which will include some flelds on Sardinia and Sicily, was estimated by the premier at approxi- mately 140,000,000 lire ($7,000,000). New armaments for the army, Mus- solini said, will be completed in the pre-estab- lished time.” Regarding the colonial army, Tl duce said 26,000 applications from volunteers have been received for a grenadier division to be stationed in Addis Ababa as a garrison force. Thirty battalions of Black Shirts are being incorporated into the colo- nial army, he declared, taking the place of a division now being brought back to Italy from East Africa. —_——————— CITY GREETS POWER LOS ANGELES, October 10 (#).— Energy of the mighty Colorado River, harnessed into light and power by Boulder Dam, was at the command of Los Angeles today. A peace-time celebration unrivaled in the city’s history welcomed the first Boulder electricity last night. It traveled 266 miles over a $30,- 000,000 transmission line. It was but a sample, 115,000 horsepower of the 1,835,000 horsepower eventually to be generated by the Colorado. Sun-arcs cast rays of 7,000,000 can- dlepower over downtown streets as the current arrived. A necklace of 16 great searchlights circled the tower of the city hall Young Washington Part of the safety campaign at Thomson School. Malcolm Rose, a member of the boys’ patrol, gives a few pointers to Alice Dubow. Malcolm is the son of Mr. and Mrs. S, E. Rose, 921 Massachusetts avenue. Alice is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Dubow, 1248 Eleventh street. Monday, Perry Fliakas, son of Mr. and Mrs, James Fliakas, and Mary Louise Anderson, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. C. C. Anderson, at the Thomson School. [ —Star Staf Photo. A & Peters & Bryson: Inter-| “proceed regularly and | BEHIND NEW DEAL Glass and Byrd Will Make Speeches to Assure Party Success. This is the third of a series of stories on Virginia politics. BY WILL P. KENNEDY, Staft Correspondent of The Star. RICHMOND, Va, October 10.— President Roosevelt's prospects of carrying Virginia are improving now that the Democratic campaign is well under way. All doubt or speculation as to the attitude of Senators Carter Glass and Harry C. Byrd, who have been at times rather severe critics of the New Deal policies, can now be definitely swept aside. They are both seasoned Demo- cratic campaigners and both will make campaign speeches for party success in the State and to keep Virginia in the Democratic column. They will make no apologies for their opposi- tion to the New Deal and will con- tinue fighting for their convictions, but will tell the voters Landon would be no improvement. They will state their belief they can best serve the party by making their fight within the party than against it. If Sen- ator Glass is not as conspicuous on the stump as in some former years, the change is due more to his physical | condition than to other causes. Glass is such a vehement campaigner that his nerves cannot stand the strain. Senator Byrd 1s recovering from a recent operation. He will make at least four major speeches, two in Southern Virginia and at least two in Southwestern Virginia, before Oc- tober 20. The Democratic campaign in Vir- ginia is well organized with head- quarters in the Richmond Hotel here. Horace H. Edwards, a Young Democrat with a strong following, is State cam- paign director. He is a member of the House of Delegates from Richmond. The keynote of the campaign is “Look to the Future’—the idea being that the people are not so much interested in what has gone by as fearful of what the future might hold. Organization Effective. Very effective organization work has been done—that job was completed three weeks ago, and done with prac- tically no money at all. Each district and local subdivision is very close to | By the Associated Press, self-supporting. So effective was the | organization that out of 1,600 com- mitteemen there were only two defec- | tions to the Jeffersonian Democrats. J. Murray Hooker of Stuart, a for- mer member of Congress, is chairman of the Democratic State Central Com- mittee and is adviser to the State| headquarters. M. A. Hutchinson, Richmond, is chairman of the cam- paign Finance Committee and Robert W. Daniel of Prince Georges, national finance committeeman for Virginia. Mrs, F. W. Davis of Lexington is vice chairman in charge of women's activities, assisted by Mrs. Irving C. Whitehead of Amherst. The workers are largely volunteers and most of | the units self-supporting. The Republican organization has more pretentious State headquarters in the John Marshall Hotel, managed by Clarence Ahalt of Richmond, never before in public life, assisted by Dr. William Moseley Brown, former Dem- ocratic coalition candidate for Gov- | ernor in the anti-Smith campaign of 1929 against John Garland Pollard, who was elected. These are also head- quarters for Charles T. Wilson, the | Republican candidate for Congress against Representative Andrew J. Montague. The Republican campaign thus far | has consisted in sending out litera- | ture and using the radio for broad- casts., Swing to Roosevelt. But the “swing” has been very defl- Left: John Albert Lyons sought by police today in con= nection with the death of Mrs. Grayce Asquith, whose dis- membered legs, wrapped in sacks, were found in Boston harbor four days ago. Lyons, a Boston salesman and war aviator, is said to have visited her about the time of her dis- appearance. Right: A recent photo of the murdered woman. Below: Oscar Battalini, 50, Quincy, Mass., chef, grilled in connection with the crime. Battalini admitted going to the Asquith cottage on Sep- tember 18. —Copyright, A. P. Wiréphotos. (Story on Page A-1) B-MEN JOIN HUNT FORWOMANKILLER Body Found on Indian Res- ervation Identified by Sisters in Buffalo. BUFFALO, N. Y., October 10.—Ad- mittedly without clues, G-men pushed | an investigation today into the killing of Miss Christina Mary Jureller, | whose bruised body was found on a | i mound of fallen leaves on the Cat- | taraugus Indian reservation. ! The body of the attractive 31 | old woman—missing from home since | | she started for a movie Wednesday— | was found 40 feet from a busy road. Two teeth were missing. Black and | | blue marks about the neck indicated | strangulation. Murdered Probably Wednesday. State police said she must have | been “horribly beaten.” Medical Ex- | aminer Charles E. Long said defi-| nitely she was murdered probably | ‘Wednesday. ‘ Federal men, in charge of the in-| vestigation because the crime ap- | parently was committed on lndlm‘ lands, joined Buffalo detectives and Erie County officers in the investi- gation, Two sisters of the dead woman identified the body late last night after it had been in the county | morgue 10 hours. | They said they had been seeking Miss Jureller since early Wednesday | nitely to Roosevelt since these Demo- | cratic organizations got to work. Sur- when she boarded a train in Spring- ville to come 30 miles to Buffalo to attend a movie and visit relatives, No Male Companions. They said Miss Jureller was in-| terested in her home, a small circle of friends and her church. She had no men companions to their know edge. Two Conneautville, Pa., men who stopped their automobile beside the highway to eat a lunch found the body late vesterday. They were George R. Wright, a toy manufac- turer, and Jack Ettinger, his foreman. . Japan Maps Fuel Future. General outlines of a national fuel | policy for Japan have been agreed upon by the commerce and industry | ministry. To economize on gasoline | it will be required that 20 per cent of | alcohol be mixed with it and a mo- | nopoly system will be established to | supply the alcohol. Whether it will | be a manufacturing or a sales mu-‘ nopoly is yet to be settled. Taxes | will be light on manufacturers of fuel | substitutes. The existing Fuel Research | Institute will be enlarged to take | charge of the coal liquefaction process and the government will furnish | $3,000,000 capital. Miller-Built Home in Westerleigh 4211 49th St. A Section of Wesley Heights Pleasing design—all brick; strong steel construction. Practical plan —4 bed rooms end 2 baths—in this Miller-controlied community. Open day ing. W. C. & A. N. Miller, 1119 17th St. Dist. 4464 Houses W ANTED For Sale or Rent—Furnished or Unfurnished prisingly enough, the *“danger area” | in the State is not in the old ninth district, so long controlled by the Slemp machine, but around Harrison- burg and in the middle valley, and in Carroll, Grayson and Wythe Counties —where, however, the political leaders confidently predict that Representa- tive Thomas G, Burch will be re- elected. All the most popular party spell- binders are already in action or sched- uled for campaign oratory. Former Gov. E. Lee Trinkle has made several speeches at Appomattox and Matthews Court House. Lieut. Gov. James H.| Price, only announced candidate for | Governor next year, assailed the Re- publican policies at Freeling. Rep- resentative Burch of Martinsville, sometimes mentioned as a possible candidate for Governor against Price, spoke at Rural Retreat. Mayor Bright of Richmond was principal speaker this week at big rallies in Lively and Hopewell. Demo- cratic State headquarters have three | | major speeches scheduled for Friday— Representative S. Otis Bland of New- port News is to speak at Arrington; Ashton Dovell of Williamsburg, Speak- er of the House of Delegates, is booked for the rally at Amelia, and Repre- sentative Burch will speak again at ‘Wytheville. Senator Byrd will make one of his principal speeches at Mecklenberg October 19 and on the same day Speaker Dovell will be on the stump at Chatham and Courtland, while Representative Bland will address & large gathering at Yorktown. Haddon and Boschen Speak. Commonwealth Attorney T. Gray Haddon and Albert O. Boschen, mem- ber of the House of Delegates from Richmond, have also been making campaign talks. Representative Clifton A. Woodrum of Roanoke, one of the President’s most ardent supporters, is to speak at Suffolk October 24 in support of Roosevelt and the election to Con- gress of Norman R. Hamilton, pub- lisher of the Portsmouth Star and ardent New Deal supporter, who de- feated Representative W. Darden for the Democratic nomination from the Norfolk district. The Democratic campaigns in the nine congressional districts are in charge of the following local chair- men: First, the Newport News area, ‘Thomas W. Blackstone, Accomac on the Eastern Shore; sécon liamsburg area, Edwin Cox of Henrico County; fourth, Petersburg and south, 8. B. Barham, jr, of Surry Court House; fifth, west of Danville and { it with us. SALES RENTALS 1321 Commecticut Avenue N.W. The Foening Star B ol Section. Leave copy for the Authorized Star Branch Offices are identified by | SHOULD you wish to Sell or Rent your house we can be of service to you if you will list We have numerous requests for City, Suburban and Country Properties. RANDALL H. HAGNER & COMPANY INCORPORATED LOANS ADVERTISEMENTS Receiven HeRg Mt. Pleasant Cigar Store—3209 Mt. Pleasant St. Is an Authorized Star Branch Office NE of the most carefully and regul. features in The Star is the Classi tion—and that is why Star Classified Advertisements DO Bring Results It is because it is accepted as_the clearance house for “wants.” You are not likely to go long without finding some one (probably many) who can serve you if you watch The Star Classified at any authorized Star Branch Office—there’s one handy by. It will be promptly fo.rverdad to the main office—a service rendered without fee; only regular rates are charged. INSURANCE Telephone: DEcatur 3600 Star Classified Section the above sign. INCREASE IN LIQUOR . REVENUE IS REPORTED Internal Revenue Shows $60,» 897,708 More Received in Last Fiscal Year, By the Associated Press. A fast-growing national taste foe hard liquor or & curb on bootlegging’ was indicated today in revised 1936 tax figures. Submitted to Secretary of the Trease ury Morgenthau by Internal Revenus Commissioner Guy T. Helvering, the figures showed levies on distilled spirits and wines brought $60,879,706 more into the Federal Treasury during the fiscal year ended June 30 than the year before. Total revenues from this source were $256,377,600. Increased consumption of beer also was reflected in a $33,562.557 gain in taxes on fermented malt liquors. Treasury officials declined to spece ulate on whether heavier drinking o a decrease in bootlegging was prie marily responsible for the pick-up in liquor tax revenues. They said, how« ever, that smuggling of alcohol from abroad had been “virtually wiped out,™ and that illicit stills were rapidly dise appearing. ] “FOR_ HEALTH’S SAKE, SEND IT ALL TO TOLMAN" nnu:;;r:u }I‘O;S vty 6ffcn 4 Fhe ONG hours over the tub—a cross and tired wife on washday night— ond a husband irritated at a sketchy makeshift dinner. Nobody knows what may happen! Avoid this—and many other dangers—by sending your clothes to TOLMAN. They return as sweet and clean as a summer sky, and you have not had one minute of trou- § (Thurs.—Fri.—Sat.) WEEK-END " SPECIAL ENTIRE FAMILY BUNDLE WASHED AND IRONED! AT A SPECIAL SAVING N THIS service you'll find all the buttons on whether you send them in or not— your handkerchiefs with initials carefully pressed on the proper side—your hus- band’s shirts perfectly TOL- MANIZED—every detail as - it should be. Of course, your laundry will be done the last’half of the week instead of the first— but who cares about such a trifle at such a saving! De- tails on request—just ‘phone. A loundry service for every need— priced for every purse. Since 1879, W MACKENZIE, Avsdoar 3 $248 'Wisconsin AVE. CleveLanp 7800

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