Evening Star Newspaper, March 21, 1940, Page 2

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Progress on Airport Wins Praise of - CarmodyandC.A. A, Gen. Schley in Party Making 2-Hour Inspection Of Project ’ John M. Carmody, Federal works administrator, and board members of the Civil Aeronautics Authority yesterday inspected the 'National Alrport at Gravelly Point for two hours and congratulated the engi- neering force for their “excellent swork and the rapid progress being made.” ‘The group, which included Gen. Julian H. Schley, chief of Army engineers, drove out on the levee and down the various runways for a first-hand view of the airport project. They showed particular interest in the method used to build up the foundation for the run- ways. Capt. L. N. Leaf, officer in charge, explained how the sand and gravel fill from the river bottom was mixed with earth dug from nearby hills to form a solid base for the paving. The north-south and northwest- southeast runways are nearly ready for paving, it was noted. Both, more than a mile long, will be 200 feet wide and have an additional 50 feet on each side for expansion. The fill between runways will be graded and later sown with grass seed and sodded. Interested in Parking Area. The visitors also showed interest in the mile-long parking area which runs from the Mount Vernon boule- vard to the plaza in front of the terminal building. Stops were made also at the site of the four hangars and the termi- nal building. Lt. Col. Sumpter Smith, engineer in charge, explained that the sdir- port at this time is 50 per cent completed. However, according to | the time schedule, the work is 75 | per cent finished. Runway paving | will start in two weeks. The alertness of Col. Smith while checking over specifications has saved the “face” of some architect, . dnake e g SR THE EVENING STAR, SUISUN, CALIF.—PICTURE OF DEATH APPROACHING—Thomas Dardis, 23, stood on the rails here yesterday to take a picture of the approaching streamliner City of San Francisco. He got the above picture, but the speeding juggernaut of the rails-killed him. —A. P. Wirephoto. Measure Allowing The Gwynne bill, which would’ permit residents of the District and the Territories of Hawaii and Alaska | to sue and be sued in the Federal| courts, now is awaiting action in an examination of the addendum shows. He caught the misspelling | of the name of the chairman of | the Civil Aeronautics Authority. | Two tablets are to be placed in the main waiting room of the ter- minal building giving the names of the men and agencies responsible} for the development of the “model” landing field the letter “c” was left out of the name of Robert H. Hinckley and that a “c” was added to the last name of H. H. Houk, a project en- | gineer. | To keep the record straight, the name of Edward J. Noble, former | C. A. A. chairman, was added to| the list. Harllee Branch, in an- | other correction, is to be set off from board members by having a “vice chairman” placed after his name on the tablet. Oswald Ryan, G. Grant Mason, jr., and Edward ‘Warner, each, will have “member” after their names. . The specifications call for a cor- nerstone of pink Tennessee marble. The bottom will be carved out to make room for a lead-coated cop- per box which will contain papers | and mementos of the time of dedi- cation. | Col. Smith said more . than 50 large contractors have inquired for | specifications and expressed inter- est in bidding on the terminal and hangars. Bids will be March 27. Besides Mr. Carmody, Gen. Schley, Col. Smith, Capt. Leaf and Messrs. Hinckley, Branch, Ryan, Mason, Warner and Houk those making the inspection trip were Clinton Hes- ter, C. A. A. board member, and Col R. S. Taylor, district engineer. opened | Official reports that the city has more bootlegging than ever before, has caused Sydney, Australia, to start a drive on “sly grog” shops. | the United States decided that a! the Senate following passage in the House Monday. The text of the report by Repre- | sentative Gwynne, Republican, of Kansas, member of the House Ju- diciary Committee, which consid- ered the measure, follows: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the bill (H. R. | 8822) to extend originai jurisdiction | to district courts in civil suits be- tween citizens of the District of | Columbia, the Territories of Hawaii or Alaska, and any State or Terri- | tory, having considered the same, report it favorably to the House | with the recommendation that it| do pass. Statement. The purpose of this bill is to ex- | tend original jurisdiction o Federal | | district courts in civil suits between | citizens of the District of Columbia,‘ the Territories of Hawaii or Alaska, | and any State or Territory. It gives | the citizens of the District of Co- lumbia and of Hawaii and Alaska the same right to bring a suit in a Federal district court of any State | on the ground of diversity of citi- | zenship as now obtains in the case of a citizen of a State. Constitutionality. ‘There appears to be no ‘constitu- tional objection to this bill. In Hepburn and Dundas v. Ellzey (2 Cr. 445), the Supreme Court of citizery of the District of Columbia could not maintain an action against a citizen of Virginia in the Federal courts of that State, because a citi- | zen of the District was not a citizen | of a State within the meaning of | the Constitution. The following | quotations from the opinion of Chief | Justice Marshall indicate the basis | of the decision: The question in this case is, | whether the plaintiffs, as resi- | dents of the District of Columbia can maintain an action in the Weather Report (Furnished by the United District of Columbia—Increasing cloudiness followed by light rain or snow late tonight and tomorrow; not quite so cold tonight, with lowest about 34 degrees; somewhat colder tomorrow night; continued cold Sat- urday and Sunday; gentle to moderate southeast or south winds, shifting to northwest tomorrow afternoon. Maryland—Increasing cloudiness followed by light snow in west portion tonight and tomorrow and light rain or snow in east portion late | tonight and tomorrow; not quite so cold tonight; somewhat colder by to- | morrow night; continued cold Saturday and Sunday. Virginia—Increasing cloudiness followed by light rain or snow in the interior late tonight and tomorrow and light rain on the coast beginning | late tonight or tomorrow; not quite somewhat colder tomorrow night and continued cold Saturday and Sunday. | ‘West Virginia—Light snow in north and light snow or rain in south portion tonight and tomorrow; not quite so cold tonight; somewhat colder | tomorrow afternoon; continued cold S The disturbance that was over the south-« ern lake region Wednesday morning has | moved northeastward to Northern Maine and a secondary that developed over South- ern New York and Southern New England Wednesday aftermoon has moved northeast- ward to Southern Maine, Caribou and East- port. 1.001.7 millibars 29.58 inches). and a trough extends thence south-southwest- ward (o the Florida coast. A minor dis- turbance is moving east-southeastward over Southern Jowa and Northern Miss Kirksville, 'Mo., inches). and a wave disturbance is develop: ing over the northwesiern Gulf of Mexico, & saip, 150 miles south. of Galveston, 1.008.imillibars (29.77 inches). ~Pressure Temains low ove Southern _Rocky Mountain region and Western iexas. El | Paso, Tex.. 1.005.8 millibars (2 An_area of high pressure is ward over the Upper Ohio Valley and Mid- dle Auantic States. Clarksburg, W. Va. 1.019.3 millibars (30.10 inches), and pres- sure is high and rising over Montana. thi Dakotas and Minnesota, Pemzina, N. Dak. 1,024.7 millibars (30.26 inches). Pressure Temains relatively high over the North Pa- cific States and northern plateau region, Baker. Oreg. 10186 millibars_ (30.08 inches). Rain has fellen in Southy Texas and portions of the Middle Atianti and North Atlantic States. and snow has fallen from the Missouri Valley eastward to the lower lake region and the Northern Appalachian region. The weather has be- come colder almost_generally east of the Mississippl River Elsewhere, temperature changes have been slight as a rule. Report for Last 24 Hours. Temperature. Barometer. Degrees.” ~ Inches, 1.012.5 militbars ( Yesterday-— 4 pm. 63 55 40 a2 2 9 Record for 21 Hours, (From noon yesterday to noon today.) Highest, 65, 8 p.m. yesterday. 850, 4 29, 6:45 am. today. Year Record Temperatures This Year. Highest, 65. on March 2 Lowest. 7. on January 28. Humidity for Last 21 Hours. (From noon yesterday to noon today.) Jshest. 56 per cent. at b am. today. west, 21 per cent, at 6:15 p.m. yes- terday. Precipitation Monthly precipitation in inches in the Capital (current month to date): Month, anuary Year | M States Weather Bureau.) so cold in north portion tonight, aturday and Sunday. River Report. Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers cloudy at Harpers Ferry: Potomac slightly muddy at Great Falls today. Tide Tables (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) Tomorrow. High Low High a 608 p.m. Low 12331 pom. The Sun and Moon. Sun, today Sun. tomorrow 2 Moon, today 4:07 p.m, a.m. Automobile lights must pe turned or one-hall hour after sunset. Weather in Various Temp Barom. High. Low. 75 b3 Cities. v . fall. Weather. Abilene Clear Albany Atlania Atl. City Balumere Bismarck Boston Buffalo Charleston Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland _ Columbia Davenport alveston elend Huron Indian'plis Jacks'ville Kans. City L. Angeles Louisville Gi He SoES2RZ Omaha Philad'phia Phoenix Pittsburgh P'tI'nd, Me. "tI'd, Ore. T T Ty So2EE D% PDSID: SEAFEERES 4 352 i sa382 Tampa 9,94 WASH.,D.C. 30.12 FOREIGN STATIONS. (Noon, Greenwich time. today.) Temperature. Weather. 6 Cloudy’ Horta (Fayal). Azore (i loudy ear udy s urrent observations.) San Juan, Puerto Rico ki Havans, 'Oub; Colon, Canal Gwynne Bill Report Text Or Be Sued in Federal Courts Is in Senate D. C. Residents to Sue Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Vir- ginia. This depends on the act of Congress describing the juris- diction of that court. That act gives jurisdiction to the circuit courts in cases between a citi- zen of the State in which the suit is brought, and a citizen of another State. To support the Jjurisdiction in this case, there- fore, it must appear that Colum- | bia is a State. On the part of the plaintiffs, it has been urged, that Columbia is a distinct political society, and “a State,” according to the definitions of writers on general law. This is true. But | as the act of Congress obviously | uses the word “State” in refer- ence to that term as used in the Constitution, it becomes neces- sary to inquire whether Colum- bia is a State in the sense of that instrument. The result of that examination is a conviction that the members of the American confederacy only are the States contemplated in the Constitution. | It is true, that as citizens of | the United States, and of that particular District which is sub- | ject to the jurisdiction of Con- | gress, it is extraordinary, that the courts of the United States, which are open to aliens, afid to the citizens of every State in the Unfon, should be closed ypon them. But this is a subject for legislative, not for judicial con- sideration. New Orleans v. Winter (1 Wheat. 89, 4 L. Ed. 44 (1816)), first dealt with the question of whether a Ter- ritory was a State within the mean- | ing of the United States Constitu- | tion (article III, section 2). It was| held that a controversy between | citizens of the Mississippi Territory | and the State of Kentucky was not a controversy “between citizens of different States,” relying on Hep- burn v. Ellzey, supra. { In Watson v. Brooks (13 Fed. 540 (Cir. Ct, Oreg., 1882)), the court| reluctantly followed New Orleans v. Winter. supra, that the Washington | Territory was not a State within ar- | ticle III, section 2, of the United | States Constitution. Although ar- | riving at this conclusion under the | principle of stare decisis, the court | indicated its dissatisfaction with the decision in Hepburn v. Ellzey. However, the decisions since that date have uniformly followed the early decision of Chief Justice Mar- shall. The Federal district and circuit courts are created by Congress un- der the constitutional authority granted in article III. These courts receive and exercise the judicial power granted by the Constitution. This judicial power cannot be in- creased or limited simply by an act of Congress. This article, however, must be construed in connection with other provisions of the Constitution. For example, in article 1, section 8, it is provided: The Congress shall have power . to exercise exclusive legisla- tion in all cases whatsoever over such district (not exceeding 10 miles square) as may by cession of particular States and the ac- ceptance of Congress become the seat of the Government of the United States. That the Congress under this pro- vision has complete authority to govern the District of Columbia and the affairs of its citizens is well settled. This right is, of course, subject to constitutional restraints so far as applicable. As was said in O'Donoghue v. United States (289 U. 8. 516): It is important to bear con- stantly in mind that the Dis- trict was made up of portions of two of the original States of the Union and was not taken out of the Union by the cession. Prior thereto its inhabitants were entitled to all the rights, guar- anties, and immunities of the Constitution among which was the right to have their cases aris- ing under the Constitution, heard and determined by Federal courts created under and vested with the judicial power conferred by article 3. We think it is not reasonable to assume that the cession stripped them of these rights and that it was intended that at the very seat of the National Government the people should be less fortified by the guarantee of an independent ju- diciary than in other parts of the Union. In the above case it was expressly held by the court that the district and circuit courts of the District of Columbia were “constitutional courts” within the meaning of ar- ticle 3. It was pointed out, how= ever, that such fact did not prevsnt | Congress from putting on these courts additional and advisory duties based upon the power of Congress to govern the District. ‘The purpose of article IIT was to create an independent judiciary with powers conferred directly by the Constitution. These powers can- not be taken away by Congress. The Constitution guarantees to certain persons the right to demand the exercise of these powers under certain circumstances. For example, a citizen of a State may do so when involved in a case or controversy with a citizen of another State. The mere fact that the Constitution guarantees this right to the citizens of a State in no way prohibits the WASHINGTON, D. C, Congress from extending that same | privilege to others who %re not technically citizens ot a State. This does not mean that Congress may | indiscriminately add to the juris- diction or authority of the courts. be found in the Constitution. The above argument applies with equal force in regard to the Terri- tories of Hawaii and Alaska. sec. 3), in the following language: The Congress shall have power to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the Territory or other property belonging to the United States. It is submitted that H. R 8822 is a reasonable exercise of the constitu- tional power of Congress to legislate for the District of Columbia and for the Territories. It should be borne in mind that the citizens of the Dis- trict of Columbia and of the Terri- | tories are citizens of the United States. They are subject to the burdens and obligations of such citi- | | zenship just as are the citizens of | the 48 States. Simple justice requires | that they should share the rights and privileges of such cilizenshlp‘ insofar as Congress has authority to | confer it upon them This is the | real intent of the Constitution. In compliance with clause 2a of | rule XIII, existing law is printed | below in roman with new matter pro- posed to be added printed in italic: Judicial Code, section 24, amended, paragraph 1 (U. S. C,, title 28, sec. 41). The district courts shall have original juris- diction as follows: First. Of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity, brought by the United States, or by any officer thereof authorized by law to sue, or be- tween citizens of the same State claiming lands under grants from different States; or, where the matter in controversy ex- ceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of $3,000 and (a) arises under the Consti- tution or laws of the United States, or treaties made, or which shall be made, under their au- thority, or (b) is between citizens of different States, or citizens of the District of Columbia, the Territory of Hawaii, or Alaska, and any State or Territory, or (c) is between citizens of a State and foreign states, citizens or subjects. No district court shall have cognizance of any suit (ex- cept upon foreign bills of ex- change) to recover upon any promissory note or other chose in action in favor of any assignee, or of any subsequent holder if such instrument be payable to bearer and be not made by any corporation, unless such suit might have been prosecuted in such court to recover upon said note or other chose in action if no assignment had been made. The foregoing provisions as to the sum or value of the matter in controversy shall not be con- strued to apply to any of the cases mentioned in the succeed- ing paragraphs of this section. Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this paragraph, no district court shall have jurisdic- tion of any suit to enjoin, sus- pend, or restrain the enforce- ment, operation, or execution of any order of an administrative board or commission of a State, or any rate-making body of any political subdivision thereof, or to enjoin, suspend, or restrain any action in compliance with any such order, where jurisdic- tion is based solely upon the ground of diversity of citizenship, or the repugnance of such order to the Constitution of the United States, where such order (1) af- fects rates chargeable by a pub- lic utility, (2) does not interfere with interstate commerce, and (3) has been made after reason- able notice and hearing, and where a plain, speedy, and effi- cient remedy may be had at law or in equity in the courts of such State. Notwithstanding the fore- going’ provisions of this para- graph, no district court shall have Jjurisdiction of any suit to enjoin, suspend, or restrain the assess- ment, levy, or collection of any tax imposed by or pursuant to the laws of any State where a plain, speedy, and efficient rem- edy may be had at law or in equity in the courts of such State. 3 | Its power to so add must in any case | Au- | | thority to iegislate for the Territories | is found in the Constitution (art IV, | THURSDAY, Inquiries Started In Violent Deaths 0f 3 Local Men Attorney’s Son Leaps From Bridge; Man Is Found Shot in Baltimore The violent deaths of three men were under investigation today. They were: Cornelius De Witt Van Buren, 28, son of a New York attorney, who leaped to his death from the Taft Bridge last night after leaving a note explaining he had “found a key to the above.” Charles F. Pace, 65, veteran chief financial clerk at the Senate, who was drowned off Hains Point yes- terday. A man identified as Marion W. Hart of 1304 Rhode Island avenue N.W,, found shot to death in a Bal- timore hotel yesterday. Mr Van Buren was seen to climb to the rail of the Connecticut avenue bridge about 7:20 o'clock last night. His body plunged about 100 feet to the roadway of Cathedral avenue and, police say, was struck by an futomobile. Driver Fails to Stop. ‘The driver of the car did not stop. C. A. Hand of 200 Pennsylvania avenue, Falls Church, Va., found the body and an Emergency Hospital ambulance doctor pronounced Mr. Van Buren dead on the scene. The widow, Mrs. Helen Van Buren, of the 1700 block of Q street N.W. identified the body at the Morgue and Coroner A. Magruder MacDonald issued a certificate of suicide. In Mr. Van Buren's room at 1901 N street N.W. police found a note from his father, De Witt Van Buren of New York. The letter indicated that the young man had been out of work and inclosed a $10 check. Two notes, almost identical, in Mr. Van Buren's handwriting, were found in the room. One was ad- dressed to “Dad” and the other was unaddressed. They said: “I will always be close to you, but I have found a key to the above and | I am going to open it.” | Senate Pays Tribute to Pace. | The Senate yesterday paid trib- ute to Mr. Pace, who was seen to slip into the river shortly after noon, Barkley had eulogized Mr. Pace for his long record of service. Senator Pepper, Democrat, of Florida Joined in the expression of sympathy as representative of the State from | Which Mr. Pace had come in 1913, Mr, Pace had been in poor health for some time and had been absent | from his office for several weeks. He ived at 1851 Columbia road | N.W. with his sister, Miss Elizabeth | Pace. | _ Arthur R. Olson of Silver Spring, | Md, told Park Police that he saw Mr. Pace take off his coat and slip into the choppy waters. Using a | life preserver, Mr. Olson recovered | the body within a few minutes, but firemen’s efforts to revive Mr. Pace were futile, Mr. Pace wus a brother of Msgr. Edward Aloysius Pace, who was vice rector emeritus of Catholic Univer- sity when he died in 1938. issued a suicide certificate, Body Identified Tentatively. Baltimore police said today they had been unable to make a positive | identification of the man they be- | lieved to be Mr. Hart. The tenta- | tive identification was made from a | Social Security card found in his pocket. The man was found in a room on | the 17th floor of a hotel in Balti- more. A bullet wound was in his head, and a revolver lay at his side. He had registered at the hotel under another name, giving a Chicago address A man named Marion W. Hart had been employed here by the branch of the Life Insurance Co. of Virginia last year. ‘ ‘When pipes burst in flats and | houses in Russia as the result of | frost the persons responsible are to | be tried for sabotage. MARCH 21, 1940. Wounded Finns Never Moan, U. S. Ambulance Driver Finds Can’t Say as Much For Reds, Asserts Capt. Hasey With his right arm encased in a plaster cast made from captured Russian supplies, Capt. John F. Hasey, 23-year-old Massachusetts casualty of the American Volunteer Ambulance Corps in Finland, today paid high tribute to gallant Finnish soldiers “who never moan.” ‘ Veteran of action in the Lake Ladoga region in the Russo-Finnish war, the young ambulance captain, here for the day, said that among all the Finnish wounded he had transported from the front lines, he never heard one of them complain. He couldn't say this, however, for the wounded Russians. His own right arm was broken when a Russian bomb was hurled from the air to a spot near his ambulance. He heard the roar of the big Russian air-bomber, Capt. Hasey explained this morning in an interview at the Willard Hotel. The bomb struck not 30 yards from his ambulance and shattered in all di- rections. “Pain shot through my arm,” he said. “I looked down and my right arm was hanging at right angle to the wrist.” One of his small company of three other ambulance men, Lewis Bart- lett, of Ohio, rushed to his aid and took him to the dressing station, where Capt. Hasey's arm was given first aid. Placed on a hospital train, he traveled 36 hours before reaching a hospital. There he found the plaster used to incase his broken arm was some which had been cap- tured from the Russians when the famous 18th Division of Russians had been annihilated by the Finns at Lake Ladoga. But his broken arm is not the American’s only injury. Capt. Hasey’s feet were frozen in Finland, too, despite five pairs of woolen socks, when the temperature went down to 50 below zero. He lost all his toenails but one and his feet still are swollen and red. “When it gets down to 50 below,” he said, “that’s cold. I had on two sets of heavy woolen underwear, jacket, my uniform coat, a top coat, two pairs of pants, five pairs of woolen socks, heavy boots and a woolen helmet. On top of all these clothes we wore the white uniforms for protective coloration in the snow.” Tuberculosis Body Starts Health Series A new series of health talks, with motion pictures, was started yes- terday by representatives of the Tuberculosis Association at a meet- CAPT. JOHN F. HASEY. —Star Staff Photo. Miss Wheelwright Dies Suddenly at Home Miss Eleanor Hungerford Wheel- right, 80, resident of Washington for decades, died suddenly last "Will Not Be Munich,’ Procope Warns of Russo-Finn Treaty Minister Tells Bankers Country Will Defend Rights By the Associated Press. RICHMOND, Va, March 21.— Terming the Russo-Finnish treaty “a tremendously hard blow to a na- tion which never demanded any= thing from others,” Hjalmar J. Pro- cope, Finnish Minister to the United States, asserted the treaty “shall not be a new Munich.” Mr. Procope, addressing a banquet * held last night in connection with a conference of bankers of the Fifth Federal Reserve District, declared “there are new defense lines in Fin- land and Finland, if attacked in the, future, will protect her rights and independence.” “Although Finland now has been forced to make peace on hard condi- tions,” the Finnish Minister said .“she has in any case, through her fight and through her sacrifices, saved her independence. She has given renewed proof that a small nation can resist aggression, and can do her duty toward the common cause of humanity.” Conference Continues. The conference continued its ses- tions today, with Charles M. Gohen, president of the First Huntington National Bank of Huntington, W. Va., presiding at the morning meeting and Frederick P. H. Siddons, sec- retary of the American Security & Trust Co., Washington, D\ C,, at the final session this afternoon. B. Howell Griswold, jr., of Balti- more told the conference yesterday that the financial “barometer is sufficiently high to put you on your . | guard” against buying long-term | bonds. night at her home, 1316 New Hamp- | attack. | Born in Westmoreland County, | Va., the daughter of Dr. Frederick Dodge Wheelwright and Eleanor Wheelwright had lived in Washing- The upper house recessed one sleeveless woolen sweater, one | ton nearly all her life. She was the out of respect for the financial| woolen shirt, one woolen sweater | sister of the late Mrs. Harry Lee clerk after Senate Majority Leader | With sleeves, one leather fur-lined | gyt ang assisted in the establish- | ment of the Wakefield National | Memorial Association, which re- stored Wakefield, the birthplace of George Washington. She is survived by three nephews, Clarence W. Wheelwright of Balti- more, Jere H. Wheelwright, New | York, and H. L. Rust, jr. | Burial will be in Oak Grove Cemetery, Oak Grove, Va, Satur- | day at 4 pm. W. J. Collins Completes 31 Years at Capitol ing of the Northeastern division of | employes of the Capital Transit Co., meeting in the car barn at Fourth and T streets N.E. A similar program will be given for 10 other divisional meetings this month, it was announced by Dr. J. Winthrop Peabody, president Coroner A. Magruder MacDonald | ©f the association. Congress in Brief TODAY. Senate: Votes on $922,000,000 farm bill. Military Committee considers pro- posal to investigate foreign arms sales. Monopoly Committee continues study of interstate trade barriers. House: Debates Labor Department appro- priation bill. TOMORROW. Senate: Expects to debate reciprocal trade agreement program. Monopoly Committee probably will continue hearings. Appropriation Subcommittee will continue work on Navy bill. House: ‘Will not be in session. By the Associated Press. Saturday night, March 16: s Subs_ planes, warships. Mines. unk by. or Yugoslavia Other causes Losses in War at Sea r ca Known Miss- dead. ing. 6 Tonnage. 7,029 3,262 3,137 2,248 4,853 4,512 unknown. 30 [ 2 T 1 0 Totals Previously reported 183 25,041 1,599.942 16 38,735 30 1428 Grand totals - 191 z?e y[z'w Shoes ALIVE with You! Liso Debs . . . and Ricl son. It's exquisite . . ultra-smart attire. tunity. Palter De Liso Milk Chocolate A NEW COLOR TONE! . .. exclusive with De become the sensation of the new Spring sea- ficiently neutrgl to blend beautifully with They're so timely . . . see them here at your very earliest oppor- MILK CHOCOLATE, $14.75 Bags to Match_....-$5.75 1,624,983 3,751 1,458 Introducing to Washington— ebs th William J. Collins, superintend- (ent of the Senate press gallery, to- | day completed 31 years of service | at the Capitol. Mr. Collins left the Washington bureau of the old New York World in 1909 to take charge of a press- | room established in the Senate Of- | ice Building during the drafting of the Payne-Aldrich tariff law. Later he joined the supervising staff | of the press gallery. Do The following “box score” lists sea warfare losses reported since | AN h's . . . is destined to . exotic . . . and suf- NV VNG VLN VL ) |GG F STREETAT TENTH INTRODUCING THE NEW COLOR | shire avenue N.W., of a heart| Anne Hungerford Wheelwright, Miss | Mr. Griswold, senior partner in the firm of Alexander Brown & | Sons, said he did not believe the present “higher prices” for high- _ grade, long-term bonds e “defl= nitely going to continue,” although “some economists think that they are here to stay.” “Danger of Storms.” Apart from mechanical market controls, he added, “which are un- doubtedly effective in fair weather and often in unpleasant weather, there is always the danger of storms, and the barometer is suffi- ciently high to put you on your guard. | “Have we forgotten the dreadful storm across the Atlantic and its possible menace to us?” he asked. “Have we forgotten our national debt and the large sums which we should and perhaps must provide for national defense? | “I cannot see any probability of higher prices and I can see many reasons which might cause a break,” he added. Portrait to Be Unveiled NEWPORT NEWS, Va., March 21 (#).—An oil portmait of Lt. Gov | Saxon W. Holt of Virginia will be unveiled in the State Senate cham= ber at 11 am. Saturday. The por- trait is by John Slavin, Richmond artist. Mr. Holt has been ill since before Christmas. Drive slowly —expect the unex- * SIDNEY WESTmc 14th and G Sts. Smart as this Dobbs looks at first glance—it's nothing to the way these rainbow shades grow on you the longer you wear them! Styled in several band _nnd trout fly. smart new color-mixtures with shape-holding O-vo-lo edge. Set off by appropriate speckled DOBBS 0-VO-10 Edge s750 In the DOBBS GUILD QUALITY $1Q with felted welt edge Sidney West, nc. 14m: G 'EUGENE C. GOTT, President

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