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- U.S. LOSES ON RADIOS KEPT ON COAST TO PROTECT LIFE Only in Few Instances Where Service Is Given Merchant Ships Have Stations Proved Financially Profitable. BY COMMANDER STANFORD C. HOOPER, U. 8. Although_ radfo has now bécome in- dispensable in many lines, its primary | function in the world is to safeguard lite at sea. This has been its primary function since its inception and will likely so remain until the end of time Mowcver, its status as a stricily hu- manitarian agency for use by the mariner has al@ays been precarious, because. as sych, it yields virtually no monetary péturns. ObviowusTy no pecuniary profits can be derlved from the maintenance Of low power stations along our cpasts fop instant operation day or night Zmply to- occasionally render aid to vessels in distress at sea. Neverthe- less low power radio stations must be available at fairly close intervals, ay approximately cvery two hundred les, all alomg our coasts \f mrotee- tion is to be afforded our ever-grow- ing maritime trade and our travel by en The occasional ! rendering of as-, =istance, through such coastal radio| stations, to ships in distress at sea may be re; i in the public mind as only inciden to the daily oper: tion of an otherwise profitable busi-, B or government enterprise, but, is not so | The maintenance and operation of American coastal radio stations has never been financially profitable. ex- cept in some very few cases where the stations are located to serve mer- chant ships in the general vicinity of our principal seaports such as New York and San Francisco. Those situated in the vicinity of less important seaports and at isolat- ed points along our extensive coasts pay only a very small percentage of the expense required to maintain and operate them from the revenue de- rived from the commercial radiograms | passing through them. Financial Loss Neces Y. There establishment and operation, therefore. would spell ruin to a_com- | mercixl_cancern and obviously if tiey | are to must <ome e performed by the Navy, or other nautical agzency. or by municipalities which are dependent in iomeasure «t least on travel and trade by sea and in whose general vicinity the re located. ately. in this regard, coastal ations are required to serve our flects and their auxiliarics in all of our waters in the interests of the national defense, and they have thus been established ‘all along our coasts. naval coastal stations serve nly our naval craft at sea, but] cnger liners and freighters of hant marine and even vessels of foreign registry oft our coasts—ex- cept within the areas around our principal seaports, where commercial coastal stations have been establish- «d to handle this business for profit, the " zovernment having prohibited itseli by statute from utilizing its coastal radio stations for commercial purpopscs wit these areas, al- though in other areas, where the rendering of radio service is just a ~ssentiul. but not financially profita- ble, the government has an unre- stricted field of activity | Tt is this feature—government com-' patition with private business enter-| prise—which vee radio a \)I'E(‘h.'lnu;l status as a _strictly humanitarian ageney, especially with respect to our maritime interests. Its services are developed and fos- tered primarily for reasons other than humanitarian and it functions a® a humanitarian agency only by on of the fact that it happens to exist for other purposes. The commercial concerns may dfs- continue the operation of their coast- al stations at any time they become unprofitable and the Navy may aban- don its stations when not required | WEDDIG HELD VO REMARRES SAME WIFE Varied Matrimonial Record Held by Frederick Man—Served Time for Bigamy. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. { FREDERICK, Md., January 20.—A week ago the marriage of Susan E. (Crone) Sherfey, fifty, and Silas W. Crone, sixty, widower, was declared veid by the local court. Thursday night the aged couple, whoke matri- monial adventures are the strangest on ‘record in the local court, were married at the parsonage of the United Brethern Churech. Crone was married to Clare V. Poffenberger. October 18, 1888. Two vears later with his first wife still living. Crone went to Hagerstown, Md.. and took out a license to wed Susan F, She The ceremony was performed in this city by Rev. M. S. Maysilles Four vears later. the state’'s at-| . this county, brought a charge | of bigamy against Crone. He was! victed ‘and sentenced to eighteen months in the Maryland penitentiary. He emerged from the penitentiary and rejoined his second wife as if nothing had ever occurred. Several months ago Susan E. Sher- fey first understoad that her marriage to Crone more than thirty yveara ago was illegal and that it could be voided in the local court. She peti- tioned the court, and the annulment was handed down a week ago. | CIVIC BACKING NEED | OF NATIONAL DEFENSE Harbord Says Fire Alarm Readi- ness Lacks Only Cash and MoralSupport. By the Associgted Press. NEW YORK, January 20.—National defense measures, essential to the pro- tection of the United Btates from in- ternal forces of dismention snd ex- ternal aggression. can be rendered ef- ficlent only-by the financial and moral =upport of the nation's vitizenry, Maj. Gen, :James G. Harbord, retired, told the National Republican Club. The present policy of defense, he Aeclared. was for the first time com- prehensive, practical, and economicsl and in keeping with the nation's traditjons and prejudices, He stressed the importance of having the plans in & state of “fire alarm readiness for execution,” as the present moment was fraught with “In the nations ! eontinyed, * have enough authority 1o go ahead with defensive measures; in “the War Department we hav ensugh talent to plan these measures in the meamhood of tha country have enough red-blooded men to make thess measures effective; but we must have money and we must have the ora) Support af the country or these :’ v‘ént ‘be worth the paper on ‘which they are written.” i in the especial interests of the na- tional defense—in fact, the Navy may be compelled to abandon important coastal statibns from time to -time, due to lack of funds to pay for their maintenance and an insufficient num- ber of men to operate them Question of Expediency. Thus the functioning of our -oastal radio station services in the interest of safety of life and property at sea has resolved itself into a question of expediency. Although nearly all sea- going commercial vessels are re- quired by to be equipped with radlo apparatus and maintained in condition for {nstant use and to carry qualified radlo operators for its op- eration in the interest of safety of 1ife at sea, there is no law or other defined responsibility, governmental or ofherwise, with respect to the es- tablishment, maintenance or oper: tion of a corresponding _service through coustal stations on shore. It is only because the Navy has hag to establish radlo stations along our coasts for serving our fleets that radlo service all along our coasts h been made available to merchant ves- sels, the Navy being. permitted to handle commercial traffic and S. O. S. calls through these isolated statlons. This is a peculiar defect in our ra- dio system which may some day as- ' sume a serious aspect. becuuse it is uniikely that the haudling of %Tom- | mercial messages between ship and | shore will ever be profitable as a business venture, except within cer- tain restricted areas, and the exist- ing unsatifactory situation is likely to_continue. Meanwhile, radio is becoming more or less indispensable in various other services. It flourishes in these serv- ices due to .the resulting immediate or prospective financial profits. It is Indispensable, of course, purposes of national defense and the furnishing of large numbers of com- plete transmitting and recelving out- fits for our military and naval forces has been a source of profitabie busi- ness to our radlo manufacturing con- cerns. Spans Oceans and Centinents. | is not only becoming an active | 1 eperated at all this scrvice | compegitor of the transocean cables, | Only to the Awmerican people, where they exist. but it is spanning | the oceans and continents and open- | ing up direct channels of communfea- tions ~ with forelgn countries with | which cable connections or other di- | rect communication services have not previously existed Obviously there should be good pros- | pects of large financial returns from | these business ventures from - the | handling of radio telegraphic mes- sages alone. There remains also the prospect of eventually {naugurating radio telephonic services over the ci cuits, and such a service should even- tually prove to be very lucrative in- deed. The operation of these services should not only be profitable to the operating companies. but they will doubtlessly prove indirectly beneficial to_our industrial life as a whole. The flourishing, nation-wide radio- phone broadcasting service justifies itself financlally from the extensive | ales of recelving apparatus and In| ther ways. Although the broadcast- | ing service has been In operation less ! than two years, it already has as- | sumed such proportions and has gain- ed In popularity to such an extent! that it cannot be characterized as otirer than indispensable. H Radio, therefore, has become the in- | dispensable servant of the landsman as well as the mariner, but it should be remembered that the men who go down to the sea in ships and the men, women and children whom circumstances have decreed travel by sea are entitled to the first clalm on its services. As a humanitarian agency it should never be compelled to give way to e pediency or to the amassing of m terial wealth. (Copyright, 1923.) BAR UNION OFFICIALS FROM USE OF FUNDS Court Issues Injunction Protecting Secretary-General of Railway Employes From Qthers. | {T | | By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, January 20.—An injuunc- tion restraining R. C. Greenley, general chairman of the United Assoclation of Rallway Employes of North’ Amer+ ica, and others from interfering with Fred S. Galloway, in the discharge of the duties of his office &s acting general secretary-treasuret of -the United Assoclation of Railway Em- ployes of North America, and collect- ing or disbursing funds of the or- ganization and barring the Madigon- Kedzie State Bank from paying out| funds of the association on their or- | ger was granted in circuit court to- | a. ads of the association and the i American Federation of Railroad | Workers unnounced in September that | the two organizations had been | merged. The United Association was | organized following the 1920 switch- men’s strike and grew out of the Chicago Yardmen's Association, which ; headed by John Grunau, led the un- authorized strike. { Galloway charged in his petition for an injunction that he, Greenley and other officers were elected in February, 1922, and that Greenley, through steam-roller methods, over- rode the wishes of the majority in putting through the amalgamation with the American Federation of Rail- road Workers. Galloway further charged that the membership of the union now is near the 5,000 mark and that Greenley has Biven out to the public press and gov- ernmental agencies that it {s about 91,000. Greenley is holding his office of the amalgamated body: fllegally, Galloway asserted, and _declared Greenley w: ttempting, by illegal balloting, to oust him from the office of secretary-treasurer. ACCUSED OF 18 ASSAULTS, HELD IN $200,000 BAIL . Man Terrorizing Cleveland East Side for Three Days Blames Bootleg Liquer. By the Amsociated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, January 30.— Bond of $300,000, the highest ever set in & criminal case in Cleveland, was ed by Pollce Judge' Silbert today when Carl Harrls, twenty-siz, ar- rested 1. night for the bable. fatal ghooting of Mrs. Carmela Ceco. after he had kept ction of the in_a state of terror for y#, was bound over to the rand jury ¥ Hai rris, credited with a police rec- ord that includes two terms in the Mansfleld, Ohio, refermatory, admitted to Judge Eilbert that he “guessed po- lice wi right” in eharging him with eighteen shootings and knifings on women end men, incjuding s on a half dozen hol I} luring his three- day rampage. ootleg liquor is bilamed by Harrls for his actions. A troop of Camp Fire Girls has been ‘organised in Ameriean Samoa. LOCAL;, RADIO GOSSIP With hundreds of letters from radio amateurs and novices to guide them, members of the Washington Radio Broadcasters’ Assocfation will meet this week to map out a definite pro- gran’ for the improvement of the local broadcasting service. The com- munications are in answer to the or- sanization’s questionnaire published in this celumn, January'7. Although the record of the votes relating to the sllent night proposal contained in the questionnaire has not been completely tabulated, it is ap- parent that there is about an equal division among those who favor and disapprove the plan. As anticipated the crystal set owners, In viriual unanimity, manifested their opposition to the adoption of the silent night plan, while the listeners-in who pos- sess’ the =o-called voted -approval or suggested some rompromise arrangement, The gnswers to the questionnaires, it was explained yesterday by C. O. Fischer, manager of the radio depart ment of . Woodward & Lothroj (WIAY), will be carefully considere by the broadcasters before they take, any definite actlon. 7 Another matter which will be given consideration at the meeting, which will be held either Tuesday or Friday night, is a proposal by Irving Geld- enthal’ of ~ the Hecht Company (WEAS), that a census be taken of the raido receiving set owners in the District. There are no records avall- able at present showing the pumber of radio amateurs in Washington. Two methods of procuring such a record have been suggested. One I to have the local newspapers publis a coupon with the request that the owners of receiving seis fill it out and.send it to the association. The other is to have a _house-to-house canvass nde of the District. The latter plan would involve ¢on- siderable time and expense, it is pointed out. while the former, Mr. Goldenthal belleves, would not re- sult In a complete census, because some radio fans would not take the trouble to fill out the coupon_ and mail it to the association. Mr. Gold- enthal's opinfon is borne out by the recent experiment of sounding sout the radio enthusfasts on the silent- night question. Of the thousands of persons in the District interested in radio, only a small minority took the time to answer the questionnaire and therein indicate to the association their suggestions for improving the broadcasting service. Broadcasting Debates. Broadcasting of congressional de- bates and presidential wessages, not but the eniire world, sppears « possibility with the announcement.that the naval radio station at Arlington. Va. Tas radiopione installation with greater power than any broadeasting station now operating in the United States. NAA. the call letters of the sta- tion. i8 the best known call in the ether to ship and shorc wireless operators who for vears have picked up daily time signals, storm warn- ings, obstructions at sea and weather forecasts broadcast from Arlington 2,500-meter wave band. To the average listener, however, NAA operating on 710 meters is a new call. The power output of the new sta- tion in the aerial is approximately one and a half kilowatts, sufficient to broadcast voice or music to any sec- tion of the count: and to ships'far out at sea. 5 possible that the Arlington servicé, Marine and Navy hand concerts. features of NAA's pro- gram broadeasting stations and relayed. Crystal sets mot sensitive enough to hear NAA would then record the pro- grams from Arlington. Development and possibilities of radio were explained .by Francis Jenkins, local inventor, at ‘the last meeting of the Washingtoh High School Radio Assoclation.. After his address the inventor &nswered scores of questions propounded Bk fhe. radi enihusiasta, Propounded Jgghe. radio. A number of the high school stu- dents recently visited the laboratory of Mr. Jenkins, at 1619 Connecticut avenue, inspected his ap atus and witnessed a demonstration of the transmission of ‘pictures- by radio. | The delegation of studenta Was com- posed of Thornton P. Dew] chair- man of the radio associ: 4 : Henry Taylor, vice president of the Cen- tral High School Radio Club: Frank- 1in Kral_operator of station 3HS, and ugene Young, trafiic manager of the assoclation. Play Seenes by Radie. The honor of broadcasfing the fArst Washington theatrical production went to station WEAS of the Hecht Company, when it sent out on the ether waves Friday night selected scenes from the comedy sensation, “Abie’'s Irish Rose.” The broadcasting of the comedy from “Abie's Irish Rose,” however, marked but one of the many unusua! The Helpful Hoosier The Hoosier Kitchen Cabinet is almost magical in its vou miles of s A Hoosier concentrates your kitchen work in a single, compact spot‘—;quipped with ‘the greatest labor-saving con- veniences ever. Every . style of Hoosi at - the: Lifeti Prices start at top Hoosiers. all; tube sets eilher | will be received by the smaller | features of WEAS's radio programs which” have been ypraised by radlo fans not only in Washington, but in virtually all” st eust of the Mls- sissippi. It is the variety of the pros grams which the station describes as “radio vaudeville” that has won for it the commendation of its many listen~ ers. Some of the outstanding hits of the Hecht' programs in the past have been the concert by the stars ' from the San Carlos Grand Opera Com- pany, concerts by the Myer Davis Le Paradis aggregation of jass artists, a lecture by Thurston, the magiotan; mind reading via radio by Julius Zanclg_and numerous others, A The Hecht Company was the first department store in Washington to install a radiophone broadcasting stgtion. and it also was instrumental in’ organigng the Washington Rad! Rroadcasters’ Associution, which now at work on a program of im- provement for the broadcasting merv- ice. Marold Levi generxl manager of the atore, calied the conference at the City Club in December at which the organization was formed. A Hark Codes. “At this moment, with my phones glamped to my head.” writes M. G. Tilton of 604 Butternut street, “T try to grope through the maze of tele- graph codes to reach the services. (The let dated last Sunday night at 8:16 o'clock). “This is the only objection I have to night broad- ‘casting” (at this moment there is & furious bombardment of three dif- ferent codes &nd singing in the far distance). - “Whoever suggested that one of the church ' services be ‘broadcast on slightly different wave length said & large mouthful. 1 eecond that mo- tlon strougly. - “(Sweet mudle, now, and no codes). As far.as Tin concerned there need be no silent nights. unless you can sllence the codes. “T have a cryi fine. The weakest station that T get it WIL, As long as the number of crystal sets far exceed bulb sets in Washington. 1 think eilent nights will be voted down and out. “(Ancther fusillade of codes. “Can you tell me where the come from this evening? They are very heavy. I see nothing in the programs in today's Star to indicate their station. I am a novice in the radio game and perhaps 1 have a ‘lot to learn’ before—we—until radio is past its infaney.” | ) codes Coast Guard Lectures. 3 Among the government brodacasts from NAA the lectures prepared by \the Upited States coast guard per- {haps are the most thrilling. Sinee January 9 the coast guard has been broadeasting semiweekly stories of the uctlvities of that serviee. which included dramatic tales of rescues at sea. The Uhited States coast guard is an organiration which constitutes = part of the military forces of the govern- ment. In time of peace it operates under the direction of the Secretary rection of the Secretary of the Navy. in time of war. In 1915 the Congre: combined the then existing revenue therefore, not a pew structure recently built up in this country, but is one whose concep- tion dates back to the early days fol- {lowing the war of the revolutiog. The coast guard is one of the mili- tary services of the country. Its ves. sels are armed; its officers and men are trained for the acts and circum- stances of war as well as schooled in i the methods and inured to the hard- {mhips of the sea Military training and discipline are found to be of the greatest value in the humanitarian work which the service is called upon to perform. bringing promptness and precision to the rendering of relief in time of distress and disaster. At the same time this training and pline fit the personnel to ente operation with the Navy when sary, providing an auxiliary force of great value to the country in time of war. The principal peace-time duty of the coast guard is t| rendering of assistance to vessels 4n distress and the saving of fife and property at sea and along our seacoasts and en the great lakes. The United Gtates became a ploneer among the govern- ents of the world in thus assuming, |as an obligation of its own govern- | ment, the organiztd and continuous {rescue and relief of the seafarer who might be left in distress by the ele- ments. among which he lives and earns I his livelthood. “Many are the stoties of shipwreck at sea or on the bedth | which* this service can relate and {in which it has participated at the rescue. The listener-in on the con guard radio broad | Thursday evenings hear some of th helpfulness. It saves teps each day. offered to a woman. er is on display here, me Furniture Store. $39.75 for porcelain- We'll gladly show vou Seventh Street Maver & Co, ‘Between D GE. § 4l set and get NAA |traffic manager of the American Radlo | | du. ties by oript] of ‘th or eing performed by them. New Station Plasmed. Washington may have another brostoasting station in the mear fa- igre., Flans are belng eonsidered by . H. manager of the local branch of the Haverford Cycle Com- any, at 622 10th astreet, who recent- y announced that the store (s stock- ing a full lime of high-type radjo equipment to put in a transmitting station, aid that definite plans 1 Mr. Cros: for installing the station have not boen made. He expects to make an announcement regarding this matter in_the near future. The local branch of the Haverford Cycle Company was established at the 10th street address sixteen years ago. e main office and factory is In Philadelphia. Hear Chicage Message. Edward Hackett and Dudler- ward of the physics group of the Arm- strong Manual Tralning School picked p station KYW at Chicago last week one step of amplification. This Teat was due to exceptional atmospheric conditiors and sharp tuning. Meeceiver Ordered at Central. The Central High School Radio Ciub is ng forward to the arrival of a Grebe CR-8 receiver and a Western Electric power amplifler, which it ‘or- dered recently through * the scheol physics department. The members plan to conduct many interesting experi- ments with the new apparatus, Officers of the club, of which Donald McKenzle 18 president, have agreed to furnish the body with & number of crys- tal receivers of a standard design, which will be available for the home use of club members. This plan was originated by Dr. Hedrick, faculty adviser. ‘Wood- j hose amateur p at-the bureau of standards cially for the purpose of participating in the transatlantic tests and whose signals were heard in Switgerland, is an _enthusiastic amateur. In e letter to F. H. Schnell, Herbert Hoover, station was set u; Relay Lcague, he describes his low- power station, which was successful in “getting across.” The letter fol- lows in part: “The set consisted of four 150-watt ‘mullards,’ input, T guess, as they got warm over 1,000 watts input, the sta- tion would be rated at 500 or 600 watts output. The H. V. batteries were used theré, and at 1,500 volts they drew six ‘amps’ and put six ‘amps’ in the antenna. I erected both the anten: and set through the courtesy of Dr. Stratton, who will be !and. partly rib two feet in @laméter, strung from the navy mast to the electrical build- lfl:'.l It ‘Au Ibflulllzfl (ee‘t ‘m‘:h h.m; the lead-in is partly cage (six inches: Bon: ~As the H. V. bat- ery leads extended all through the ullding, they in themselves acted as & very good ground, when using the revirse feedback, 1 tuned the coun- terpoise (a semi-circular pan of thirty- foot radius)..to the rest of the set with a separate inductance, and use no_other ground connection at all. “I tested during the ‘free-for-all that evening and then afterward worked 9BHX, but DX work wans very hard, for the wave is 240 (can't get lower on account of battery leads) and very pure. The receiver is a DX amplifier and external hetérodyne and it bas a CRS, there skinned a mile! NOF is going too.” re et! ~ BY RADIO TODAY Schedule of Locai Wireless Entertainment. NAA—Naval Radio Station, Radie, Va. 10:30 —Maeteorological report on 5,950 meters by arc transmitter. 12 npon—Time signal, ship orders and weather report. 10 p.an.—lship| orders, rt and time signal. PO16:30 ‘p.m —Naval press news (2,650 meters). weather Te- WDM-—Church of the Covenant, Con- wmecticut Avenue N Street (360 Mete 11 o'clock—Morning _service; dress by Lady Anne Azgapepian. 8 o'clock—Evening service by Dr. Charles Wood, pastor. ad- WJH—White & Boyer‘Company (380 Meters). 8 p.m.—Services of the Vermont Avenue Christian Church; sermon by | Rev. Earle- Wilfley; special musical | service. | remcia D. C. OPERA QUARTET BROADCASTING FEATURE Music Pupils to Give Selections From “Rigoletto” in Radio A Concert Program. Selections from the opera “Rigo- lotto” by a quartet composed of pupils from the Washington Opera | School under the direction of Edouard overjoyed at the good news! “The antenna is a fifty-foot T cage in walnut or mahoga Albiorf, will feature the concert pro- gram Tuesday night of station WJH ! Stmmons Metal Beds Are Always in Good Taste There" Furniture Is of Wh! quartet are Louis Annie, tenor: Doro+ thy Mansfield. soprano; Rose Pollio, contralto, basa. e & Boyer Co. In the and Albert Shefferman, A number of selestions aiso will be ndered by Romeo E. Fagilio, trump- ist;. Mrs. Florence M. Conklin, fio- = NEW > and “Gypsy Love Song. prano, and Charles N. Gordon, bari- tone. Mr. Fegilio will play "0 Sols “Shubert’s Serenade” and “Ber- Mrs. Conklin will sing the “Slave Song,” “*Morning” and “Smiliny Through, while Mr. Gordon will siny “Any Old Port in a Storm " “Mandalay, MW § e RADIO = STORE b A S LA Selling Radio Outfits and Accéssories at Lowest Prices 6x18 Condensite Panels, $: Crystal Detector Volta, Variometers, $2.25 up Phones Nerco, 2,000 ohm Western' Elgc.. 2,200 ohm . Variable Plate. . Plate Plate HAVERFO 522 10th N. S ) o SRS LRI AT YT FY)Y) D CY Jacks Open Circutt. Closed Circuit. .. Double Circuit. . Multi Jack.. B Batteries 'z Volt, small. Volt, large #1.95 45 Volt, variable. 2350 CLE SALES CO. Just Below I" S¢. * Phonc Maim 6388 31.00 “Pape’s Cold Compound’’ Breaks a Cold in Few Hours TInstani Relief! Don’t stay stuffed- up! Quit blowing and snufMing! Take “Pape’s Cold Compound” every two hours until three doses are taken. The first dose opens cl nostrils and air passages of stops nose running; relieves head- wche, dullness, feverishness, sneezing. Simmons Metal Beds are always in good taste. Beau- tifully finished to match other furniture, they afford a delightful furnishing. good-looking, full-size Simmons bed at $27.50, ny finish, .twin beds in walnut or mahogany finish for $29 each and others for less, too. S a The seeond and third doses usually break up the cold completely and end all grippe misery. “Plpes: l:.v;d Compound” iz the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. Tastes nice. Contains ne quinine. Insist upon Pape’s. ~ Planning a Better Bedroom It’s More a Matter of Good Taste, Than Expense / Quite often.the bedroom loses its attractiveness because all the odds and ends of furniture that are not: appropriate for the living or dining rooms are shift- ed, to the bedroom to be out of the way, This is wrong. The bedroom is the room that expresses one’s personality more than any other. Certainly it should be just as attractively furnished. Accomplishing a well-furnished bedroom does not necessarily mean the expenditure of a whole lot of money. If is mucl more a matter of good taste. A few well chosen’pieces will do wonders toward making the bedroom the comfort- able and good-looking room that" it should be. Here, at the Lifetime Furniture Store, will be found just dozens and dozens of fine bedroom suites and single pieces in many rich finishes and enamels and in a wide variety of beautiful Period Designs: All are reasonably priced, too. There’s a good-looking four-piece suite im walnut ‘with large dresser for $395—and many others for less, too. Than Lifetime Seventh Stree More