Newspaper Page Text
. TALMADGE VICTOR IN OUSTER FIGU1 Court Filled With Appointees of Governor Upholds Ham ilton’s Dismissal. BACKGROUND— When Gov. Talmadge of Georgia summarily kicked State Treasurer Hamilton out of office February 24, foes over the Nation cried "dicta tor." State Legislature, not friendly tg Talmadge, had failed to pass general appropriation bill. Hamil ton refused to sign State checks until Legislature acted. Talmadge's hold on State departments generally held complete with ouster of Hamilton. 4 ___ By the Associated Press. ATLANTA, May 9—Gov. Eugene Talmadge today won a 5-to-l State Supreme Court decision on the first point of his financial ''dictatorship” to reach that body. The court upheld Talmadge's dra matic removal of State Treasurer George B. Hamilton February 24. Hamilton had declined to sign a $100,000 State check because no ap propriation for the expenditure had been made by the 1935 Legislature. Informed of the decision, Talmadge • said of the rulings: "They properly interpreted the law.” Appointed by Talmadge. The court which decided the case was composed of two regular Supreme Court justices and four Superior Court judges appointed by Talmadge to sit for justices who had disquali fied themselves. Declaring J. B. Daniel, Talmadge's appointee to the office, to be the legal treasurer of the State, the court's order held that $2,500,000 in State deposits tied up in three Atlanta banks and one at Marietta should be paid to Daniel. iiiv iiiigaiivii lictu utrcxx ixivu uj ixic banks on the theory they were inno cent stakeholders and did not know whether to pay the deposits to Hamil ton or Daniel, both of whom were claiming them. The ruling today reversed a 2-to-l decision of a three judge Fulton (At lanta) Superior Court enjoining the banks, Hamilton and Daniel from pay ing out the deposits “except upon law ful appropriations or allocation.” Other Cases Pending. The Supreme Court found it “un necessary" to decide other questipns pertaining to Talmadge's one-man control of State finances. One point raised in the pleadings had been the legality of Talmadge's order pro claiming old State appropriations in effect because the 1935 Legislature failed to pass new ones. The court will have the opportunity ♦o rule on such questions in other litigation now pending. The majority opinion today was Written by Judge Schol Graham of McRae. Talmadge's home city. Su . perior Judge Gordon Knox of Hazle hurst dissented. After holding Talmadge acted ac cording to law in his summary sus pension of Hamilton ,the court said: "If the Legislature otherwise di rects. the suspended officer will be re stored to office and entitled to com pensation as though he had not been juspended.” Nye City Forum Speaker. Senator Nye of North Dakota and David Popper, member of the research staff of the Foreign Policy Associa tion, will speak at the Capital City Forum Friday at 8:15 p.m. on “Phases of the International Crisis.” The meeting will be held at 1502 Four teenth street. Lost and Found advertisements for the daily Star will be accepted Mondays to Fridays, inclusive, up to noon day 01 issue. Saturdays and legal holidays up to 10 am. day of issue. For The Sunday Star up to 11 p.m. Saturday. LOST. ENGLISH SETTER—Small, black and white, male, brown spot over each eye; \icinity Tak. Park. Reward. Georgia 1J3H. ESKIMO SPITZ, male answers to name of 'Buddy '' strayed from Logan Circle Fri day p.m. Reward. Potomac_4787._ FALSE TEETH—One set of false teeth be tween Capitol Heights. 7th and H sts. n e, Few a rd _ F. E. Taylor. 1020 7th st. n e._ GLASSES—Readme shell frame, in Perau Optical Co. case: Wednesday night. Re ward. 72o5 Georgia ave. n.w. Geo. 8QH5. GLASSES child's. Meridian Park Friday. Return to Grace Allen. 2101 N. H. ave. Reward. Phone Potomac 5524._ HANDBAG brown leather, zippers, at Greyhound Bus Station, eve of May 7. on prrival of bus from Scranton. Pa. Reward. Call Clarendon 003-J._ HYDRAULIC BLACK HAWK JACK. Re ward Crockett Service Station. Claren don f>74. NECKPIECE gray fox lost telehone booth. Woodward & Lothron’s. Reward Mi 13 Harvard st. P.W.. Apt. 308._ POCKETBOOK lady’s, black, between Casch ave.. Bladensburg Md and 1 mile east on Defense Highway Saturday about 4 pm. Reward Greenwood 1H80-J. POCKETBOOK black containing eye glasses compact comb, etc.: Eastern Star card with owner's name. Call Adams 45.35. _Reward^_ _ • POLICE DOG. large, male gray tan and 1 black, named ‘ Duke " Reward. Adams 3 30H, 705 Rock Creek Church rd._n.w. • TERRIER—Wire-haired: Saturday morn ing: practically blind, ragged coat. Reward. Phone Columbia 7184._ WALLET—Brown, leather, near Dupont Circle. Reward. Banick. 2222 Que st. n w.. Apt, i _ WRIST WATCH, lady’s. Bulova. near Palais Royal, Reward._Cleveland 0025. • 24 TICKETS to "Mildred's Junior Frolic” at Wardman Park Theater on June 1 and 2: ''Miss E. Solt" on envelope. Reward. Phone Decatur 185Q-N. artblAL NOTICES. ANY OLD FLOORS MADE TO LOOK LIKE hew oak. over night. Tel. Adams B313-J for demonstration._ _ 14* SPECIAL RETURN-LOAD RATEs'ON FULL and part loads to all points within 1.000 miles: padded vans: guaranteed service local moving also Phone National 14H0. * NAT. DEL. ASSOC . INC.1 .'117N._Y._ave. INVALID ROLLING CHAIRS—For rent or aale- new and used all styles, all sizes- re duced prices UNITED STATES STORAGE CO.. 41S 10th at n w ME t f>44 OLD DAGUERREOTYPES TINTYPES. KO dak prints or any treasured “keepsake pic tures” restored Improved conled Marge or email) bv EDMONSTON STUDIO 1333 F at. n.w Specialists in fine copying for over 25 years TERMINAL VAN LINESOF TAMPA FLA* announces the opening of Washington of fices: at.?l:n ~n,h st n w- telephone West 0904. Attractive rates on full or part load shipments by padded van to all points North or South._ OWNER-DRIVEN TRUCK-MOVE \NY thing anywhere, short or long distance *1 r o u r, Ph on e_C o 1 u m b i a n T‘J4._' • FURNITURE REPAIRING AND UPHOL stering done In your home. Will so anv wherc. Address Box 4:t4-J Star offlce. 1 *» • WILL SELL AT A SACRIFICE RRAND Tn«rti21’h.lr^2m nulle Call Monday and niVtewda,y batween 3 a m. and ti n.m Rio goth st. n.w._ 11* I WILL NOT BE R ESPONSIBLE~FOR A NY riebts contracted by any one other than myself. CHESTER C. COOKSEY 93 IN Kansas s^^larendom_Va 1 FOR ECONOMICAL ELECTRICAL—REl Patr* and base pluas Installed or any kind JI** rork Preouent trlpa to other East toon Dependable Service Since RTORAflg on DAVIDSON TRANSFER A CO. phone Decatur 2500 ROCK Building insulation furnished ______ pi Installed Asbestos Cover wnm JP* aPd Roofing Co 4104 YV UUL Georgia «ve Adams 2337 RFPRTNTS —If you need Reprints or nrDDivrrc ReDroduction» Book, KLPK1N 1 b Maps Statements Sched DCDDIMTC u*es etc get our low e*ti IxcrKIIN Id mates NOW COLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH CO.i 40 L St. NJE. Metropolitan 4801. Al a “Bomb” for Governor Intercepted The contents of a “bomb" addressed to Gov. James M. Curley, which urns intercepted at the Burlington avenue sub-postal station in Boston. The package contained a half pound of peppermint candy, an alarm clock, excelsior, five pieces of tin foil, the front page of a newspaper, and a note saying, “Your time has come, brave man." ~-Wide World Photo. Senator Barkley’s Dilemma 1932 Keynote Puts 1936 Keynoter to Need of Changing Views. eant, both on and off stage, are chuckling over the dilem ma of Senator Alben W. Bark ley of Kentucky. Every quadrennial national political convention has a keynoter, a speaker selected to sound the key for the cho rus of attack on opponents and of promise of changes to be effected if the opponents are defeated. Senator Barkley was the keynoter of the Dem ocratic National Convention which launched the New Deal toward power in 1932. Senator Barkley has been se lected to be the keynoter at the Democratic National Convention which is to renominate the New Deal ticket next month. The chuckle comes from recol lection of the high points of his key note address of 1932 and from rec ognition of the absurdity of any one , except .a Republican sounding the i same keys for the opening of the 1936 campaign in the light of what has happened in the meantime. What, i the chuckling query asks, can Sen ator Barkley say this time? Cer tainly. the chuckling wisecracks go, he will have to write an entirely new speech, for he won't be able to pick up much of what he wrote for the Democratic applause in 1932. The record of the 1932 convention shows Senator Barkley stressing a keynote of economy. At one point he said, "While making pious and vir tuous overtures to 'economy,’ Mr. Coolidge officially recommended al lotted and approved increases in the j ' expenses of the National Government of more than $650,000,000.” Federal Cost Increase. Later he observed “the cost of gov ernment in the United States has in 1 creased out of all proportion to the needs of the people, or to the bene fits received bv them." He recalled that in 1900 the expenditures of the Federal Government . had totaled 1 $650,000,000. an amount which “barely pays the interest on our public debt”; | that in 1914 the total had been about $1,000,000,000. and that in the Hoover administration years of 1931 and 1932 it had been $4,800,000,000 and more j than $5,000,000,000, respectively. “What shall the Democratic party ; do when it comes into power on the | fourth day of next March?” Senator : Barkley asked in 1932. “Shall we pay service to economy, or shall we abol j ish every unnecessary office, every : useless commission, every redundant I bureau that has been established un | der the expensive regime of Harding ' and Coolidge and Hoover, and lift | from the backs of the American peo : pie (the record notes loud applause) that intolerable and unbearable load which weighs them down today until | they can scarcely look the sun in the j ' face?" Official records, carrying into the subsequent years of the New Deal ; administration, show expenditures of the Federal Government as follows; 1931 (Hoover). $4,091,597,712; 1932 (Hoover). $5,153,644,895; 1933 (nine i months Hoover, three months Roose velt). $5,142,953,627; 1934 (Roosevelt), $7,105,050,085; 1935 (Roosevelt), $7, 375.825,166. Figures for 1936 are lack ing, because the fiscal year does not end until June 30, but Henry Morgen thau, jr.. Secretary of the Treasury, recently estimated for the Senate Finance Committee that the deficit alone, counting in prospective bonus payments, would amount to $5,966, 600,000. Mounting Public Debt. The public debt in 1931 was $16, 801.485,143, after steady reduction during Republican administrations; war-time peak; in 1935 it reaphed $28,700,892,624, and by next June 30 j it is expected to total about $34,000, 000,000. Interest on the public debt amounts to $820,926,353. The House has passed the fourth tax-increase bill since the New Deal began, in contrast with the series of tax-reduction measures of the Coolidge administration, and the total esti mated increase in revenue expected from the latest measure, as sent to the Senate for impending action, is not equal to the 1935 debt interest payments. "We shall reduce the constantly in creasing burdens of extravagance in government by the elimination of all unnecessary and unproductive activi ties which have grown up without precedent in the history of the world.” Senator Barkley said, also taking a thrust at the Hoover commissions. Senator William H. King. Democrat, of Utah recently remarked that the New Deal administration had estab lished 33 agencies. "This Government oi ours is the peo ple's Government. The Constitution is their Constitution," Senator Barkley said amid applause in 1932. Today many of the outstanding acts sponsored by the New Deal have been declared unconstitutional by the Su preme Court and it is recalled that the Guffey coal act, decision on which is still awaited, was passed at the insist ence of President Roosevelt, regardless of doubts as to its constitutionality. “It is not a wholesome thing to have eight or ten million men and women unable to procure labor from which to support themselves and their families in a Nation which has boasted of its supreme wealth,” Senator Barkley said. The American Federation of Labor estimates that the unemployed now number 12,000.000. Congress, in the meantime, has appropriated $8,180, 000.000 for relief and jobmaking proj ects and is now considering the addi tion of $1,500,000,000 to that total, to continue through the next fiscal year work-relief policies which have aroused vigorous opposition even among Dem ocrats. (Copyright, 1936 by the New York Trib une. Inc.) HOSPITALS INVITE VISITS Nine in Chest Will Hold Open House Tuesday. The nine Community Chest hos pitals will hold open house Tuesday, which has been designated as national hospital day, and will be prepared to show visitors through the institu tions. A special corps of nurses has been assigned as guides. The hospitals affiliated with the Chest are Children’s, Columbia, Epis copal Eye, Ear and Throat. Emergency, George Washington, Georgetown, Na tional Homeopathic, Garfield and Providence, SENATOR BARKLEY SPONSORS PRESS WUNE BIEL Rogers Measure Would Add 2,200 Craft to Present Army Fleet. By the Associated Press. With congressional action virtually completed on a billion-dollar Army and Navy defense program, fresh ef forts were turned yesterday toward obtaining authorization for an Army air fleet of 4,000 planes. The $572,446,844 War Department bill is through Congress and awaiting White House approval. The $529,000, 000 Navy bill needs only House con currence In minor Senate amend ments. The bill by Representaive Rogers, Democrat, of New Hampshire, au thorizing an increase in the Army Air Corps strength from 1.800 to 4.000 planes already has been approved by the House. Rogers and Chairman McSwain of the House Military Committee said they hoped the Senate'would consider the bill before adjournment. Indorsement of the program by the War Department was awaited by the Senate Military Subcommittee before : taking action, but this was expected within a week. Rogers got the bill—minus this in dorsement—through the House with out a single objection. He said he would not appear before the Senate committee unless absolutely neces sary, but that he did not believe the 4,000-plane authorization would meet serious objection. The Army supply bill would pro vide funds for 565 new airplanes and the Navy bill carries an appropriation for 333. Nevertheless. Rogers and other members of the House Military Committee contend the United States | is 10 years behind in its airplane con struction program. Rogers said 4.000 planes were neces sary for adequate national defense. He said his Military Aviation Sub | committee was informed that foreign I nations had from 5,000 to 10,000 ! military planes. Of the major powers, only Japan was said by him to be behind the United States in military air strength. War Department officials have esti mated the Army would have only 777 serviceable planes on July 1. McSwaln said "further neglect of Army aviation is nothing but false economy." EMPLOYES HOLD DANCE I _ More than 1.000 guests were present last night at the annual dance of the Lansburgh's Mutual Relief Association, held at Wardman Park Hotel. The ! event, held yearly, is designed to build up an esprit de corps among the em ployes of the store. Forty-one prizes were awarded, ranging from an eve ning dress to a box of candy. Oliver B. Brown is president of the association: Kenneth Rogers, vice president; Mrs. Irene Beers, treasurer; Miss M. Saltzberger, secretary. The proceeds of the dance go to the benefit fund maintained by the association. Among the guests were Sol Lans burgh, president of the company; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lansburgh, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Goldsmith, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Goldsmith. Mr. and Mrs. James Rotto and other officials of the store. GIRL FLYER SETS Helen Richey Climbs 18,000 Feet for New Mark in Midget Plane. BY JOSEPH S. EDGERTOX. • Sucking oxygen through the stem of a dismantled briar pij>e and stamp ing her feet in their casing of three layers of wool socks, bed room slippers and flying boots, to keep them warm, pretty little Miss Helen Richey coaxed a midget 440-pound airplane to an altitude of 18,000 feet above the Shen andoah Valley yesterday afternoon to gain the United States its fiftieth world aviation record. Miss Richey, wearing two heavy fly ing suits, took off in a 90-degree tem perature at Washington Airport shortly before noon. Three hours later, In the bitter cold more than 3 miles above the Virginia mountains, she annexed a feminine world altitude record for light airplanes of the fourth category; a new national record for the same category: probably estab lished a new national altitude record for men or women in planes of this category, and a few moments later landed on Endless Caverns Airport, New Market, Va., to capture a $200 prize ottered by Maj. E. M. Brown for the first woman to land there with a world record to her credit. Miss Richey also may have exceeded the new world altitude record for fourth category airplanes established April 24 by Benjamin King, Washing ton sportsman pilot, at Langley Field, Va., but is believed to have fallen sev eral hundred feet short of the margin required for an official new world rec ord. Rules of the Federation Aero nautique Internationale require that an altitude record be exceeded by 200 meters, or 656 feet, before a new mark can be recognized. King's record was 17,940 feet, subject to final correction, and she would have had to reach 18, 596 feet for a new mark. Flew King's Plane. She made the flight in King's tiny Aeronca airplane, lent to her by the local sportsman pilot. King, who ac companied her during the flight in a second Aeronca plane, told The Star by long-distance telephone last nighS that, from his knowledge of the be havior of the altimeter in the record plane, he estimates Miss Richey reached a maximum altitude of 18.000 feet above Washington Airport. Two barographs, installed by the National Aeronautic Association and sealed at Washington Airport, were removed after the landing at New Market and will be brought to the Bureau of Standards tomorrow for calibration to determined the exact altitude attained. The girl flyer, only woman ever to fly the United States mail in sched uled service, reported she had no diffi culty at any time during the flight except from the discomfort of cold feet. The special lightweight oxygen apparatus designed by King for his record flight functioned perfectly, she said, the little 40-horsepower engine never faltered and, except for a stiff side wind, flying conditions were excellent. Her chief worry was that Mrs. Ben jamin King, who drove to New Market, might be late getting there with Miss Richey's clothes and that she might have to shuffle around in her two flying suits, her three pairs of wool socks and her two pairs of shoes. Her worry was needless; Mrs. King reached the airport before the two baby air planes. and the flyer was able to get into conventional clothing before the New Market festivities began‘in cele bration of her achievements. Worried by Appearance. Miss Richey apparently was worried about her appearance in the two bulky flying suits. When a photographer asked her to stand beside her plane for a picture just before the take-off, she demurred a moment. "Oh, you don't want to take me looking like this," she said ruefully. The record plane, weighed in at Congressional Airport yesterday by Bureau of Standards experts, was only 22-hundredths of a pound under the F. A. I. allowance of 200 kilograms, or 440.92 pounds, after King had taken out the floor boards from the cockpit, removed the baggage compartment cover and substituted an improvised light-weight tail skid for the regular equipment. An extra fuel tank was installed to increase the normal 8-gallon load to 15 gallons. Miss Richey landed with nearly 5 gallons remaining in the auxiliary tank. To gain the advantage of more than 150 feet in elevation between Washington and Congressional air ports, Miss Richey then flew to the local air terminal for the take-off. International rules provide that the altitude must be measured from sea level, minus the elevation of the take off point. 3D LONDON GIRL Soho Searched for Man Who Used Club and Wire on Brunette, 24. By the Associated Press. LONDON, May 9 —Silent inspectors from Scotland Yard stalked a gar roter through the dim streets of Soho tonight after a pretty third girl victim had been found in her bed—clubbed and strangled with a thin strand of wire. Brunette Constance May Hind, 24. who. neighbors said, lived a "Bohem ian life," was slain early today under circumstances almost identical with | the killing of two other women in the last six months. Neither crime has been solved. Today, however, the strangler used the wire to clinch his crime. The other victims were garroted with a silk stocking and a silk handkerchief and. like Miss Hind, clubbed. Medical Examiner Sir Bernard Spilsbury found the thread-like strand pulled tightly about the young wom an's neck. Her skull was fractured in several places, apparently with a hammer or poker. The victim also had been slashed. The body was found across a bed. in Miss Hind's Soho room. The series of murders began in No vember when Josephine Martin, bet ter known as ‘'French Fifi.” was strangled with a silk stocking, and beaten. Last month Marie Cousins, also a French woman, was slain—this time with a silk handkerchief. On Way Home NEW KING LEAVES ENGLAND FOR EGYPT. f~* KING FAROUK 0/ Egypt, 1C years old, boards the channel steamer at Dover, England, for his journey to Cairo to succeed his late father, King Fuad. King Farouk, who has been staying at Kingston Surrey, England, traveled by train through France to Marseilles, where he boarded the S. S. Viceroy of India for the last leg of his journey home. —Wide World Photo._ SELASSIE TURNS TO GENEVA FOR AID Explains Why He Left “Un equal Struggle” to Go to London. By the Associated Press. JERUSALEM, May 9—Emperor Haile Selassie, in his first explanation of his flight from Ethiopia, said to night he decided “with a sad heart to abandon the unequal war and to plead our cause at Geneva.” “We could no longer contribute to a condition in which old men, women and children were massacred.” he said in a long communique in which he traced the history of the Italo-Ethio pian dispute and charged international pacts were violated. "We appeal to civilization to help re-establish peace in Ethiopia,” said the little Emperor, who came here this week, leaving a riot-torn capital be hind him. Prays for Ethiopia. The Emperor knelt sadly before Je rusalem’s Holy Sepulchre to pray for his conquered land. The vanquished ruler's communique besought Geneva justice “to protect a weak nation against a stronger." Ethiopia cannot believe, Selassii 5 said, that the League will fail to “seek reparations" against the power it has condemned as an aggressor—Italy. I “Have courage and hope!” he told 200 Ethiopians a short time later at a communion service in the Ethiopian convent. Confers With Banker. The bearded little Negus, who came to the Holy Land aboard a British cruiser yesterday, arose at dawn. Ac companied by his ministers, he went first to the Jaffa Gate, then to the Holy Sepulchre to pray and kiss the Stone of Unction. Later he rested at his hotel. Due to fatigue, he is under a doctor's care. Only one visitor—a banker—was per mitted. With this visitor the Negus dis cussed the storage of a fortune in j coins he brought from Addis Ababa. | They were reported worth more than $5,000,000. The Emperor will go to London in I three or four days, one of his suite dis j dosed. PRONOUNCER NAMED Prof. H. P. Harding. George Wash ington University, will act as pro nouncer in the twelfth annual Na tional Spelling Bee to be held Tues day, May 26, in Washington. Harding studied phonetics at the University of London and has served ml a member of the Advisory Com mittee of the American Academy of ; Arts and Letters, which makes an | nual awards for good diction to radio : announcers. 11 We Have Just 3 1936 Ford V-8s to offer at loss down! i |(28 M«plMy| all you need is a job Keep Rollin’ W ith NOLAN 1132 Connecticut Ave. uv,vvv reopie uni DC wrong BE WISE ANY MAKE IW A T C H m a:T $1 _Adjusted JL sint^nlg TRADE MARK Est. 1914 BRING THIS COUPON Monday and Tuesday Special ANY SHAPE CRYSTAL..29c ANY MAIN SPRING.75c FREE Brine Mir watch, hare it ref mated rieht to the second free ef On anr we hare ever 60,000 satisfied customers. Washington’s Largest Watch Repair Company J. F. ADAMS 004 F Bt. N.W.NA. 0039 A LATIN Small rroups now forminr for berinner*. intermediate and advanced students. Spe cial review courses. Private lesson. THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES 111ft Conn. Ave. Natl. 0‘JTO. PAINT <$t. Gal. Outside White_1.05 3.50 31 Colors_.95 3.30 Tinners and Roof Paint_.75 2.20 Interior Gloss_1.15 3.75 Flafkoatt for walls_80 2.50 5-LB. PACKAGE VENO STONE CEMENT FLOOR PRIMER AND LONG HAN DLE BRUSH TO APPLY— $1.89 BOTH FOR I 14 Pt. Pt. Screen Enamel_30c 45c Stove Pipe Enamel.. 35c 55c Auto Top Dressing.. 40c 65c Expart Paint Advice Free 710 13th St. N.W. Electric Fans YVestinghouse or General Electric Latest type rebuilt A — and guaranteed * 7k like new lti-lnch, <9 I II . J J AC or DC oscil- Y I ^ lating. Reg. price, M. mm *:i.->.oo. v H. A. K. Electric Co. 1005 N. Y. Av. NA. 6534 r—i . I I * * WANTED! 5 High School Graduates AS JUNIOR SALESMEN Packard -Washington Motor Car Company will train five (5) high school graduates as junior salesmen of Pack ard automohiles Includ ing the popular Packard 120—one of the fastest selling cars In the world. If you have nnlshed high school. If you're ambitious, enjoy Intel ligent hard work and anxious to earn money —then write full par ticulars about yourself (including age) In a let ter addressed to PACKARD Connecticut at S * ★ 9 Offering My Long Experience and Known Reputation for Reliable DENTISTRY At prices about Is to *2 what you have been accus tomed to paying for a like profes sional service. Per s o n a I attention. Terms arranged. DR. VAUGHAN, Dentist Metropolitan Thrater Bldr. 932 F St. N.W. ME. 9570 DR. FRANK J. ROWELL __Rental_Sureeon._Associated_ TERMITES Flying Ants WE TREATED IN 1933 THE PAN AMERICAN UNION. The Pan American Annex in 1933. and are now treating their garage. i Results Speck _ Free Inspection. Guaranteed Treatment TERMITE CONTROL CO. A Waihinvton-Owned Company Nat l Press Bldg. Nat l. 2711 “Ask Our Customers" '**^*^ ** ****^** FOR 18 ^eaU ELECTROL OIL BURNER ...has been the most famous'name in the oil heating industry. Electrol is the lowest priced high grade oil burner made. WHY PAY MORE? No Money Down Nothing To Pay Till September 1 (§IFFlTH-(ONSUMERS (OMPANY 1413 New York Ave. ME. 4840 » Drive Out Today and Make Your Own Garden Selections Ever-Blooming ROSEBUSHES Perennials Japanese Red Maples Evergreens Red Flowering Dogwood Shade Trees Japanese Cherries Annuals Flowering Crabapples Also a Large Variety of Shrubs and Trees A. GUDE SONS CO. Nurserymen and Landscape Contractors Frederick Pike, 2 Miles Beyond Rockville In any FINISH you want... LjSf- ...Any COLOR | you choose BARRELED SUNLIGHT Always Means Quality Paint E have a complete line of day and let us help you select a Barreled Sunlight paints in suitable finish and harmonizing all finishes and in colors. Each colors. paint is a quality leader in its We are Headquarters For field. All give you the outstand- Interior Enamel. Flat Walt Finish • Far* ing beauty you want, the long-run economy you need. Come in to- Undercoat * Outside creme WHITE ENAMEL PARTIAL GLOSS GLOSS FINISH 4.25 $3.25 Gals._■ Gals. __$125 Qt_ 95* Paint Sow—Pay Out of Income—Ask About the Barreled Sunlight Payment Plan HUGH REILLY CO. 100% Owned and Operated by Hugh Reilly Fomily Since 1888 PAINT 1334 New York Ave., Notional 1703 GLASS IF YOU BURNED COAL THIS PAST WINTER ... if you’re tired tak ing out ashes — dis gusted with constant coal shoveling—desir ous of complete auto matic heat of the high est quality at the lowest possible cost ... you owe it to your self to use the coupon hereon ... Remember, this offer is for a lim ited time — so ACT NOW. - _*] S-510 Southern Wkoleialen, Inc. 1519 L St. N.W., Wnkiifton, D. C Please send me oomplete de tails of your Special Spring Offer of more than #25 toward a Kelvinator Oil Burner and particulars of special term#. Name .... Address ... 4