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32 SUPERPOWER LINES GAIN IN NEBRASKA Dozens of Towns Abandon Own Plants to Tap In on High-Voltage Wires. Special Dispatch to The Star. . LINCOLN, Neb., September 1.—Ne- braska is being gridironed by the transmission lines of power compa- nies, all of them hooked up with one another, and as a result, dozens of the smaller towns are abandoning their locally-owned and municipal plants and buying power from the large companies. In some cases the latter are supplying all equipment, but in most instances the towns are using their old distribution systems. They can all buy current cheapeer than they can make it. Fear of this resulting in a monop- oly that will later seek to enforce higher price schedules has resulted in a movement among public owner- ship advocates for a law that will enable three or more municipalities joining in a group development. At Present the towns are restricted to supplying those within its own bor- Bryan is leading this Still Rely on Steam. Water power development in _the state is declared too costly and haz- ardous by the engineers, and while nearly all of the companies have water power development dams, they are relying upon steam operated sta- tions to manufacture the greater part of the current. Only about 9 per cent. of the current now sold is de- veloping by water plants. of the water powers developed in the state but 80 of them are operated. The sand in the streams and other physical deficiencies made most of them unprofitable or imprac- ticable. The flow is very variable and the topography of the country is against any hope of large develop- ment, engineers say. Superpower has come to Nebraska This means the interconnection of existing electrical producing plants. and means with respect to power just what it does with regard to trans- portation. Complete inter-connection would mean the free flow of electri- cal energy over all the lines of inter- connected companies as railway tra- fic goes from one end of a State or the country to another over many different lines. The four large companies, operated by as many groups of stern capi- talists, the Central Power, with head- quarters at Grand Island; the Ne- braska Gas and Electric, with head- quarters at Lincoln: the Nebraska Power Company, Omaha, and the Western Public Service Company, Holdredge. These all send current from one end of each other's system to the other, hundreds of miles, when there is a shortage or breakdown. Hits Inolated Plants. The whole proposition is narrowing down to the most economical produc- tion, and this has been found in the building of large generating stations and the sending of current over hun dreds of miles of wires without any appreciable loss of enmergy. The isolated plant is beljeved to be dcomed, because it cannot compete swith the low cost central stations of many units. The farmers are rapidly becoming vsers of electricity. Many farm homes along the line leads tap the wires at convenient point, and use the current for lighting their houses, barns and outbuildings and running machinery. In several counties farm- ers have formed ejectrical districts, bonding their farms to build a dis- tribution system and taxing them- selves for maintenance. The current is bought from some central station plant. WIFE IDENTIFIES BODY OF DROWNED PROFESSOR John Adams Taylor Believed by Niagara Falls Police to Have Been a Suicide. By the Associated Press. NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y., September 1—The body of Prof. John Adams ‘Taylor, formerly instructor in the University of North Dakota, who was found drowned in the Niagara River, was sent to his home in Westford, Mass., yesterday. Mrs. Amarilla Tay- Jor of Cincinnati, wife of the profes- gor, came here and confirmed the iden- tification of the body made by other relatives. Relatives think Prof. Taylor fell oft a Toronto boat accidentally. The local police think the death a suicide, saying they found the dead man's raincoat in the reservation park. Prof. Taylor was returning to his wife's home in Cincinnati after a year's tour through Europe when he disappeared at Niagara Falls. Alarm- ed by his silence, relatives came here several days ago. W. R. Taylor of Westford, a brother, and Frederick A. Snow of Lowell, Mass., brother-in- law, identified the body. Taylor's baggage was found in the railway station at Buffalo. TWO MINERS KILLED. Blast in West Virginia Shaft Proves Fatal. W. Va., Septem- ber 1.—Two miners were killed yes- terday in an explosion at mine No. 97 of the Consolidation Coal Prod- ucts Company at Riversville, 15 miles south of here. The bodies were re- covered 10 hours later by mine res- cue crews a mile in the mine. The victims were identified as R. M. Moats and John M. Muse, both of Rivesville. HEADS G. 0. P. BUREAU. J. P. MacArdle Named in Labor Drive by Republican NEW YORK, September 1.—Fred- erick C. Hicks, Eastern director of the Republican national campaign, yester- day announced the appointment of Jo- seph P. MacArdle of Worcester as head of the Eastern headquarters labor bu- reau. Mr. MacArdle and his colleagues will begin Tuesday an active drive for votes for Coolidge and Dawes. The States to be covered by the Eastern bureau include New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, all the New England States and all the Southern States, including Oklahoma. — Steamer Towed to Port. PANAMA, September 1.—The Amer- ican steamer George Allen, bound from San Francisco for New York, which had been drifting helplessly at sea for eight days with a broken pro- peller shaft, was towed into Balboa today by the steamer Albert Jeffreys. Speeders Will Face Bullets. BERLIN, September 1.—Speeding motorists in the town of Oberhausen, in the palatinate, are to receive dras- tic treatment at the hands of the po- lice. The police have received orders to fire a warning shot for motoristy who are “stepping on the gas,” and it they do not halt, then to fire a bullet inte the machinery of their e R THE EVENING NO MATTER WHAT YOU DO IT’S WRONG. Goo 0 Heavens! ARE YOU HOME AGA(MT WHY O EARTH AREN'T You LIKE MOST mem? THEY NEVER COME HOME FROM THE “T\mE “THE GOLF SEA3OM OFENSTILL Y Cceoses! THESE NIGHTS WHEN ALL | WANT 1S SoME SALAD An HOME WARMNG NEARLY ENERY A REGULAR DiMnER Y DAY 'VE BEEMN CLIPAING BuT CARToONS OF GOLF wipows o SHOW You BuT You SIM?L:/ WON'T TAKE THE HinT! '™ DiscouRrAcED ! THE OWL 'S HOUSE A Thrilling Adventure Story By Crosbie Garstin Copyright, 1926, By Frederick A. Stekes Os. (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) CHAPTER II Since that night, 17 years before, John Penhale had done no love mak- ing, nor had he again visited Tregors. The Tregellas affair had broken his nerve, but it had not impaired that of his aunt in the slightest degree, and he was frightened of her, being as- sured that, did he give her a chance, she would try again. And now the old lady was dead and in dying had tried again. John pic- tured her casting her final noose sit- ting up, gaunt and tall, in her four- poster bed, dictating her last will and testament to the Helston attorney, awed farm hands waiting to affix thelr marks, sunset staining the west window and the black bull roaring in the yard below. And it was a shrewd cast she had made; John could feel its toils tightening about him. He had always been given to understand that Tregors was as good as his, and now it was as good as Carveth Don- nithorne’s — Carveth Donnithorne! John gritted his teeth at the thought of the suave and ever prospering ship chandler. Tregors had always been a strong farm, but in the last 17 years Selina had increased the acreage by a third, by 100 acres of sweet upland grazing lopped from the Tregellas es- tate. There were new buildings, too, built of moor granite, to stand for- ever, and the stock was without match locally. John's yeoman heart yearned to it. Oh, the clever old woman! John pictured Carveth Don- nithorne taking possession—Carveth Donnithorne, with his condescending airs, patronising wife and school of chubby little boys. Had not Carveth goods enough in this world, but that he must have Tregors as well? John swore he should not have Tre- gors as well, not if he could stop it. How could he stop it? He puzzled his wits, but returned inevitably to the one answer he was trying to evade, “Marry within twelve months! Marry within twelve months!" His aunt had made a sure throw, he admitted with grim_admiration, the cunning old devil! It was all very well saying “marry,” but who would marry a man that even the rough fisher girls avoided and children hid from. He would have no more force or subter- fuge. If any woman consented to marry him it must be in full knowl- edge of what she was doing and of her own free will. There should be no repetition of that night seventeen years before. He shuddered. “No, by the Lord; no more of that—rather let Tregors go to Carveth.” In fmagination he saw the squire's daughter as he was always seeins her in the dark nights when he was alone, stricken numb in his arms, glazed horror in her eyes—saw her running across the blind country, sobbing, panting, stumbling in fur- rows, torn by brambles, trying to get home, away from him—the Terror. Ho shut his eves, as though to shut out the vision, and rode on past Ger- moe to Kenneggy Downs. The\moon was fiying through elouds like & circus girl through hoops, the road was swept by winged shadows. Puddles seemed to brim with milk at one moment, ink the next. At one moment the surrounding country was visible, a-gleam as with hoar frost, and then was blotted out in darkness; it was & night of complete and star- tling transformations. The shadow of a bare oak leapt upon them sud- denly, flinging unsubstantial arms at man and horse, as though to grasp them—a phantom octopus. Penhale’s mare shied, nearly unseating him. He came out of his somber thoughts, kicked spurs into her and drove her on at & smart trot. She swung for- ward, trembling and uneasy, nostrils swelling, ears twitching, as though she sensed uncanny presences abroad. They reached the high ground above Perranuthnoe — waste, gorse-covered downs. To the south the great in- dent of Mounts Bay gloomed and glittered under cloud and moonshine; westward Paul Hill rose like a wall, a galaxy of ships’ riding lights prick- ing the shadow at its base. The track began to drop down hill, the moors gave over to flelds with high banks. An old pack horse track, choked with undergrowth, broke into the road from the \ward side. The mare cocked her ears towa: it, snorted and checked. Penhale laid into her with his whip. She bounded forward and shiad again, but with such violence tnis time that John oame out of the saddle aitogether. He aa¥ & sbadow rush across the rod, heard something thwack on the mare’s rump as she swerved from un- der him, and he fell, not on the road, as he expected, but on top of a man, bearing him to the ground. John tell he knew exactly what he had to deal with—highwaymen! The mare's swerve had saved him a stunning blow on the head. He grappled with the assallant as they went down and they rolled over and over on the ground feeling for strangle holds. John was no tyro at the game: he was muscled like a bull and had been taught many a trick by his hind Bohenna, the champion, but this thief was strong also and marvelously elu- sive. He buckled and twisted under the farmer's weight, finally slipped out of his clutch 'altogether and leapt to his feet. John scrambled up just in time to kick the heavy oak cudgel from the man's reach and close with him again. John cross- buttocked and back-heeled him re- peatedly, but on each occasion the man miraculously regained his feet. John tried sheer strength, hugged the man to him, straining to break his back. The man bent and sprang as resilient as a willow wand. John hugged him closer, trying to crush his ribs. The man made his teeth meet in the farmer's ear and slipped away again. Once more John was just in time to stop him from picking up the club. He kicked it into the ditch and set to_work with his knuckles. But he could not land a blow: wherever he planted his fists the fellow was not, eluding them by a fraction of an inch, by a lightning side-step or a shake of the head. The man went dancing backwards and sideways, hands down, bobbing his head, bending, swaying, bouncing as though made of rubber. He began to laugh. The laugh sent a shiver through John Penhale. The footpad thought he had him in_ his hands and unless help came from some where the farmer knew such was the case; it was only a question of time and not much time. He was out of trim and cooked to a finish already, while the other was skipping like a dancing master, had breath to spare for laughter. At that time of night nobody would be on the road, and help was not likely to drop from Heaven. He had only himself to look to. He thought over the manifold tricks he had seen in the wrestling ring, thought swiftly and desperately, hit out with his left and followed with an upward kick of his right foot—Devon style. His fist missed as he expected, but his boot caught the thief a tip under the knee oap a8 he side-stepped. The man doubled up, and John flung him- seif at him. The footpad butted him in the pit of the stomach with his head and skipped clear, shouting savagely in Rommany, but limping, limping! John did not know the language, but it told him there was a companion to reckon with—a fresh man; the struggle was hopeless. Nevertheless he turned and ran for the club. He was not fast enough, not fast enough by half; three yards from the ditch the lamed thief was on him. John heard the quick hop. skip of feet behind him and dropped on one knee as the man sprang for his back. The footpad, not expecting the drop, went too high; he landed across John's shoulders, one arm dropping acfoss the farmer's chest. In a flash John had him by the wrist and jerked upright, at the same time daragging down on the wrist; it was an adaptation of the Cornish master- throw, “the flying mar ‘The man went over John's shoulders like a rocket, made a wonderful effort to save himself by a back somersault, but the tug on his wrist was too much, and he crashed on his side in the road. John kioked him on the head till he lay still ard, picking up the club, whirted to face the next comer. Nobody came on. John wa: perplexed. To whom had the fellow been shouting If not to & confederate? Perhaps the cur had taken fright. and was skulking in the gorse. Very well; he would drub him out. He was flushed with victory and had the club in his hands now. He was stepping towards the furge when he heard a slight sorunching sound to his left, and, turning, saw a dark figure squatting on the bank at the rosdside. John stood still, breathing hard, his cudgel resdy. The mysteri- ous figure did not stir. John stepped nearer, brandishing his club Sull the figure made mo move. John and at STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1924. —By Webster. O 1CE TEA HERE YOU CAME FDIMG of clouds, flooding the road with ghostly light, and John, to his astonish- ment, saw that the confederate was a girl, a girl in a tattered cloak and tar- nished tumbler finery. munching a tur- nip. Strolling _acrobats! That ex- plained the man's uncanny agility. “What are you doing here?”" he de- manded. “Nothing, sir,”” said the girl, chewing a lump of the root. ‘Il have him hung and you trans- ported for this,” John thundered. did you no harm,” said the girl calmly. That was true enough. John wondered why she had not come to the assistance of her man; tribe law was strong with these outcasts, he understood. He asked er. The girl shrugged her shoulders. “He beat me yesterday. I wanted to see him beat. "You done it. Good She thrust a bare, well molded arm in John's face. It was bruised from el- bow to shoulder. She spat at the un- conscious tumbler. “What is he to you?" John asked. Nothing.” she retorted. “Muck,” and took another wolfish bite at the turnip; she appeared ravenous. John turned his back on her. He had no Intention of proceeding with the matter, since to do so meant carry- ing a stunned footpad, twelve stone at least, a mile into Market Jew and later standing the publicity of the Assizes. He was not a little elated at the suc- cess of his “flying mare” and in & mood to be generous. After all, he had lost nothing but a little skin; he would let the matter drop. He picked the man up and slung him off the road into the gorse of the pack track. Now for s horse. He walked past the munch- ing girl in silence, halted, felt in his :ocket, found a florin and jerked it to er. Here,” he sald, ‘“get yourself an honest meal.” The florin fell in the idtch, the girl dropped off the bank onto it as he had seen a hawk drop on a fleld vole. “Good God!"” he muttered. “She must be starved,” and walked on, He would knock up the inn in Market Jew and spend the remainder of the night there, he decided. He would look for his horse in the morning—but he expected it would trot home. A hundred yards short of the St. Hilary turning he came upon the mare; she was standing quietly, a_forefoot planted on a broken rein, holding her- self nose to the ground. He freed her, knotted the rein, and mounting, clat- tered down the single street and out on the beach road on the other side. 8ince he had his horse he would push straight through after all; if he stop- ped he would have to concoct some story to account for his battered state, which would be difficult. He went at walk, pondering over the events of the night. On his left hand the black mass of Bt. Michael's Mount loomed out of the moon-silvered bay like some basking sea _monster; before him lay Penzance with the spire of St. Mary's rising above the masts of the coasters, spear- ing at the stars. At Ponsandane River the mare picked up & stone. John jumped off, hooked it out and was preparing to femount, when he noticed that she had got her head round and was staring back down the road, ears pricked. There ‘was some one behind them. He wait- ed & full minute, but could neither see nor hear anything, so went on again, through Penzance, over Newlyn Green and up the hill. The wind had died away. It was the still hour that out- rides dawn; the east was already paling. In the farms about Paul John could hear the cocks bugling to each other; hidden birds in the black- thorns gave sleepy twitters; a colt whinnled- “Good morning” from a nearby fleld and cantered along the hedge, ‘shaking the dew from its mane. Everything was very quiet, very peaceful, yet John could not rid himself of the idea that he was be- ing followed. He pulled up again and lstened, but, hearing nothing, rode on, calling himself a fool. He dropped down into Trevelloe Bottoms, gave the mare & drink in Lamorna stream and climbed Boleigh. A wall-eyed sheep dog came out of a cottage near the Pipers and flew, yelping, at the horse's heels. He cursed it roundly and it retired whence it came, tall between fts lega. As he turned the bend in the road he heard the our break into & fresh frenzy of barking. There was somebody behind him after all, somebody who went softly nd stopped when he did. It was as he had suspicioned; the tumbler had come to and was tralling him home to get his revenge—to fire stacks or rip a cow, an old gypsy trick. John swung the mare into & cattle track, tied her to a blackthofn, pulled a heavy stons out of the mud and waited, crouched against the bank, hidden in the furse. He would scttle this rogue once and for all. Every yooman instinct aroused, he would have taced forty such in defease of i HELP—MALE. NEVER mall ORIQINAL recommendations %eu!‘-.u-_-.-m«._t Use COPIES. I KEEPER—Man, e lenced in bank asc- Coumting preferred; state age, edocation, ex- mrnnr:m"nh:!nr: and le,-lklon lx‘ll‘:ln. on " Rddress Box -X., m’-'r. ~(:on ey > BOYS, 14 to 19 years of age, as message cartiers for part-time work; school boys pre- ferred. Mr. Gerhold. 1407 G _st. n.w. INSTRUCTION COURSES. Continued. HELP AND SITUATIONS. SITUATIONS—DOMESTIC. Centl LEARN BARBER TRADE_QUICK. BABY. Hig demand. Tri-City Barber School, 817 E. Baitimore #¢., Baltimore, Md. WE WANT two men who ( couvincingly ‘ashington until Oct. 1. It you prove satisfactory you will be Tetained in the service of a large corpora tlon. See Mr. Eider, 8:30 to 9:30 or 4 to 5, 120 Mcqill_Bidg. to work in BUTLER-VALET: white, must be neat, trained and_have habits: good tion._Address Hox ar_office. CASHIER and general retail store; long ot references, sl W, Rrar ofce. P CLERK—Shipping and receiving, are- House. @2 Frste mw. oo T T GOLLECTOR, must have cat and come well commended’ able to farnfsh indemnity bond for $200. Apply Tuesday after 9 a.m. to Room 2%, Tond hidy. COUNTER CLERKN 1n_ pDlumbing__wupply house: in application state line of ‘work ac customed to and_salary expected. —Address 45-X. Star office. 5 OR_for Potomac _ yards 2 capable and strong Dermanent: excellent opportunity for advancement for right man; gire experi- ence, referencex, etc., in letter. Addreas Hox 183X, Rtar_ofie, 1 £It, gawoline station: must be experi- enced in’ changing ofl and tires; references required. _Automotive Acccasories Co., Inc., 10th_and E _xts. n.w. 2 ICE~ CREAM DIPPERS—Young men (2 white; evening work, 6 to 12 p.n. Call 3042 14th st n.w. ABORERS—Wreecking Tullding et Tt and ¥ Do long dol $4 per 10-hour day. Apply to Superintendent on jol MAN to repair and upholster furniture; must be_experienced: state experience .and ‘wages expected: for steady job uwp until March 1, 1 Addrexs Box 98-X, Star_office te ‘q % Address Box 73- MEN (3) with sales anager: experience not Decexsary; guaranteed 2 i Room 900, Fed. Am. “to distribute n.w. MUSICTAN® for monthly public concert; rehearxa wtrings mostly needed: ' splendid for development. Addrews Box offie Church _ofchestra, DRAFTIN G—Mechanical, architectural, topographic, etc. taught day and night, &)l year * learn to earn big money; start now; complete course in ‘a.'t:-“l ':tlmllnh é‘l,ll, ;l"rh or nh«m;) for our catalog. Col ) Ttk and T sta_Phone N, #1500 e Civil Service Examinations, Stenography and typew riting each Tuesday. Special preparations. day and vight. Instruction and practice, 9 a.m. ch week. 'uition for combl) he patent office needs 100 ass tant examiners immediately. Salar begin Bpecial review course for tl tion and wpecial 10 thone who ing enrollment week. The Civil Service Pre| ratory 8chool. 8.E. cor. 12th & F n.w., Fr. AUTO DRIVIN . For operator's permit—lunch hour or any time; any car farpikhed. FOSTER, Frank. 8787. ~Fashion Artists Needed at Excellent Salaries. You Can Learn We teach you in a short while and assist graduates to positions. Day and evening ses- sions now forming. Ask for particulars. LIVINGSTONE ACADEMY, Costume Design and_ Millinery, 1517 Rbode Island ave. between 15th & 16th. ne_Franklin_7475. GENERAL, HOUSEWORK, by colored w EWO 1228 6th at. n. GEN SEWORK—Reliabie woman wishes place; stay nights. son t. n.e. RK OR MAID-—an):"d Ccolored Jnck i a1 AL HOUSEWORK girls. PERSONAL ALTFORNTA- LEAVING WASHINGT ing: " tourist npi S ‘pro rate expen<egy ] . Star_office. 1 AL ADVICE FREE TO at ‘afford to- pav LANDER, 415 Dist WE PAY than you cousult us hefore #0ld and diamonds. ING COMPANY, nklin_4415 nT. B 8 Bank Bldg. 16° UCH MORE FOE OLD SIL et elsewhere you should welling. We THE SHEF 1225 Conn. ave. Bt nw. GIRL. colored, want, chambermnid. ARE NOW VATING § 70 $i0 FOR R e I Exchunge. 655 D at. nw. Phone et e HOUSEKEEPER and_cook, Germa for American people. Address 2!\07 JOHNSON RFFT TI0M 3 enpervi North i Tt 1620 18th n.w. NDRY wanted to take home; references. Phone Lincoln 8320, WORK to do at h Addrens. 2017 3 t. maw Bratclass i nice sunny PART TIME WORK_ Reliable useful in_ 1766 T st. n.w. PLACE A% OR HOUSEWORKER WANT F Brown, | WASHIN Sherma CAMERAS, field glasaes, shotguns. tonts of every kind: anything you have- to seil. Groce 11th and E n.w.' Phone Franklin 833 or postal. HELP—FEMALE. NTER personality T4th st nced. a Apply Tuesday morning, # o'clock. NIGHT FIREMAN. “Apply engineer, Pathic_Howpital. 2nd_and N TDERLY ¢ ington_Hospital REAL ESTATE SALESMAN, with cur, in estabiished office; fine opportunity for man who will work. ' Full co-operation from the office. _Address Box 55-X. Btar office. SALEAMAN —Can _earn $40 to $15 weekly permaneat position; direct sales. 900 Inter- Rational Bidg, 30 SALESMEN for men's clothing: fine oppor- tunity for live men; advancement to those that qualify. Also man to take charge of pressing shop. State experience and full par- ticulars in first letter. Address Box 191-W, &T! APHER—Ambitions young man_ to learn duplicatiog business; small walary and commission to start: wnifmited possibilities for industrious, conscientious man. Address AGER. iarge chain o wili_underiake to tri 21 to 30, for positions This training takes pla begina in ock 1 long hourx must be expected. le for beginners. Not of interext to the unambitious or thows who expect a doilar before it in earned. but a real opportunity for men of vixiun capacits liking retail work. Address. giving age, education previous_ experience. Apply in_person. « 414_7th . 212 12th 1e G MAN—Outside -‘.‘{e. work: eyt ; worker can earn §35 per week. Apply Room 900, 1317 F st. n.w. 3 Y MAN, Dot over 30 years of age, fo n collections: excellent opportunity to itying to learn credit clothing busi- nce not necessary. Apply to Fam wda fountain. Stone & n.w. with wome keeping. pr s one having had some ex- [iiencs with auto service record, “Mr. Short. lartway Motor Co.. Inc., 1065 Wisconsin ave. n.w. faith, to add to additional 3 willing to start for $25 & week. A good fu- ture for the right men. Nee Mr. Brown, Room 308 Rurchell Ridg., S17 1&h st., be- ceen 5.6 p.m. Mond tween SELLING POSITION WITH A DEFINITE FUTURE With one of Washington's The expansion program of the company is cre. ating openings for several additional salesmen. Not only do these powitions axsure an excellent fncome. but a permanent position is assured and promotion to managerial positions to thoxe Who 'have ability and Industry. 1t you are afraid of work, do not bother fo answer this ad. We want workers, not drones. Our work not_investments. books or insurance. ~We give our.men thorough instruction and help in Closing malex where necessary. We wiil show you What some of our men are doing and you Judge for yourselt both for the present and Our_field of prospects i unlimited. in selling specialties preferred, Apply Room 403 Munsey Tature. Experience Dbut not necessary. Ruilding. 9-10, 4-5. CHEF—Nights; highest wages paid; must be experienced. Childs, 1423 Penna. ave. NON-UNION 10 PLASTERERS, 5 CORNICE HANDS. ot Thite or Colored. | rt-class mechanics ne 3 On e SONEPH SHATIRO CO. Woodley Road_and_Woodley Pidc EVENING WORK—Young women, under gov- ernment, for 1 or 2 hours: reasonable salary. ddrexs Rox_205T. Star_office. GIRL—Light hou ar nights. 917 CAMP OUTFIT—Auto tent and folding camera, Address Box 1 tar office e CLGTHEA—WIll pay highest prices for iadie and men's worn clothes. Write or phione D. Steln. 1308 7th st. n.w. Phone North 403, CLOTHING—Cail Main 4145, if you want The oldest and most reliable Louse fo call for mewe worm clotbing. Justh's Old" Stand, DIAMONDS AND) ESTATES OF 7 can be disposed of privately Ly parties to their best advantage. = Rodgin.Farr Company. Suite 412 Evans Building, 1420 New York avenue (formerly with Shaw & Brown Company). DIAMONDS, Jewelry nd_ola_goid, for ca Bo delays. Aivin Hofla, diamond broker. F ot 0.w.. rooms 17 and 15. Main 6408, ¥ responsible 13 LADY —Oppottunity to f cultured lady. No experience mecessary. salary. Rapid promotion. Address Box 349-W, Star office. MARCEL WAVER —Fairly experienced ent position. Margaret B. Scheetze, MILLINERY BALESLADIES. perienced: permanent position. & Co., 13th and_ F sts. PANTRY GIRLS_Evening work, 4 to 12 pm. Call 3042 14th n.w thoroughly &: Apply Dana ~experienced v and commission. Milton SALESLADY wanted, experienced. Boot Shop, 410 Oth st. n.w. Leyy, er. SEAMSTRESS, experienced on portieres. See Mr. Stobbie, ' Tuesday morning. Franklin Square Hotel, X o take dic- rite and figure fairly well: ent’ position. State age, ry. Address OGRAPHER for small office: at iome; modest salary to start: Ydvancement. Apply Rtoom 900, Fed, Am. Rank_bidg. DIAMONDS. old gold, wilver, bought for cash. Louis Abrahame, 815 G st. n.w, FEATHER BEDS and furniture; best prices paid. Square Deal Furniture Co., £01 Eye st w._ Phone Main 5636. FUBRNITURE — Diniog, living and bed room fineral housebold goods. ted: best pri paid. Capital Furnitura Co., 490 La. ave. n.w. or_phone_Franklin 102 FURNITURE I vou have any furnitare or other goods to sell, and you want to_obtain best _result otes, 421 10th hone_Franklin_ 2013 T You want to obfain best re- forniture and other miscel- . call 3._Shapiro, 600 Louisiana ave. Kin 4755, FURNITURE—We pay the price_you have a HERt (o cxpect. (Al Franklin: 76; evening, Adams 127 Columbia_Furoiture Co. FURNITURE—Would Tike to purchase enough for 11 rooms. Address Box 235X, Star office. a* FURNITURE—We buy Bousehold _ furniture and oftice fixtures. Money advanced on stor- age. Sachs Futniture Co., corner 8th and D ota. n.w. Main 6306, FURNITURB—Before selling_your hourebold goods call §. Weisenberg and get best re- its. Main 9275 416 10th st. n.w. RAPHER-TYPIST, evening. by ma; Piiter. | Awply” Room 703, Disteict a FURNITCRE, pianos. carpets, etc. Phone M. 1282 for wagon or have me call. “‘Weschler, ave. n.w. E OGRAPHER—In patent law off perience desirable. Rtate experience and aryexpected. ” Address Box 136.X. Star offce TYPISTS <R ueation: ~ good Star offiee TYPIKT- light ofice work. 909-10 fernational Mg accurate ry. high _school _ed- 2 in wilver, watches, Jewelry needed in our mfg value paid. _Selinger’ OLD GOLD, siiver, diamonds, Jewsiry: fine, Beautifal plece: XY iraota, 1823 G st nw PIANO—Upright, mabogan: abie. diamonds and _old dept. Full cash must be reason- Address Box 254.X. Star office. 3% 51,000, | and_ cleaning husi ESS OPPORTUNITIES T TNITY for ligng) Muin KING, GAS, strect; pumps; ey ase rack and 4 roself i 6 months, Col ETERLY. fully coid. comimat Twation 0. Addrees Box 170X, Srar s, 10 15 ROOMK. ALL FILLED. FSTT boardera: rice. HIgnt: oo na Kidros Bos 112 W Riar i FOR SALE vice siatin Ioe" and twa. hastocss Dot INEhway th Clasarne Anaaos errs? |} Bl M4, ¥ i TABLF. possession. it P Apply Reason for elling, owr = neoln <21 FLOATING DANCING PAVILION, floor 30x%0 foet, With ticket offce. lunch counter, kitchen toilets. efe. Dargain if sold at once. Addrecs Hoz 63X, Btar oice, "0 o A 00MING 1O ely furnished town’ rearonabi. A RARE OPPORTU man_and noi afra 10 engage in & o : owner lea o 1 establi operating two places At present time: wani & capable young man to take charge of one: unable to give proper ntion to both. Address Box 11 r DENTIST office. office. INT) district “wants o Buy estaniished ing business. Address Box dental e D HMPANY i in want ¢ man Earnings depend an ab its. Good references and small capital ro quired.” This is not & “fiy-hy-night" business Address Fox 1 v BOOK STORE: location: large 1ist ouf-of-town sacrifice for cash. Address Box oce. . BAKERY AND LI movie theaters, People’s Drug Store, larze market. Addreks Box 81X, Star office. 1 PART OF A STORE. with all equipments, for hi llinery, ‘at best Address Rox 26 HOUSE wanted in any Tay cash. Address Hox w tion: will x Star office. £t i oin foun B Razines business; reas on for selling etely equip building: now Address ERY at 3007 13th et n.w., growing busi must sell on account of operation for « ESSTON - Com opposite govt Rrocery. sen_or hardware store in part trade for large brick residence, close to East Capital st. car; va- Cant: large Earage and wareroom in e X% Lave m number of clear lots in the 1 trict. _Willy trade for pasing bosi N. E. RYON CO,, INC., 1423 F have $10,000 cash, T can show sou arn big returns in the next 5 years in the building business; large returns from the start without inv money_at once. 0 ‘WOMAN neat. clean, respectable, for counter work in cafeteria. 1124 Connecticut ave. n.w. TLAYER PIANO. = Will pay cash. Address Box 209-X, Siar_offies. 3% WOM white, at once; help in store and do general housework; must ay at night. Apply 3318 M st. n.w. 1¢ 30 to 35, o RECOMMENDED SERVICE. OUNG LADY CLERK fn high-ciass confec- tlonery. 3042 14th n.w. TOUNG LADIBR (). fo solicit_club member- ahip in office. buildings. for the Butterick Pub. Arply Tuesday after 1 pm. to Room_208. Bond hidg. YOUNG WOMAN to work in exchange for business courwe. Apply Tuesday hetween 10 Mr. Hales, Steward School, 1200 PERIENCED: 00D LARY S, 1335 G ST. BYPIST AN LERK for rent dept. of large real estate office; one with previous office experience preferred; state age, experience and salary expected ; replies confidential. Address Box 140-X, Star office. MILLINERY SALESLADIES, experienced. Creeron Millinery Co., 614 12th st. n.w. HELP—DOMESTIC. CHAMBERMAID and waitress—Neat colored irl: experienced: 3819 ilitary_rd.. C} CHILD'S N experiencer Apt. 304 an; WANTEL—SALESMEN. and_downstairs work: ®tay nights; references required. e 1480 Columbin_rd. The following business comcrrns gwaron- tee satisfaction to Star readers. Any com. plaint found nccessary to be made 1o The Ftar il veccive prompt attention. For admiasion fo Recommended Sérvice Col- smn_call Main 5600, Branch 115. reanonabie, ACME EX- TERMINATOR CO., Fr. 2765. 506 9th n.w xe3® ATTO LUBRICATOR—SAVE YOUR MOTOR Try our new xcientific system of will’ eliminate vaive trouble and 1101-3 13th st lin_ 5625 55 per_hour: valves ke relined. oiling, greasing, wash- special prices. Edw. Travis, West 1K19. ATUTO TOPS REPAIRED. eeat covers. uphol- stering: expert workmanship. Qualify Auto Toy 1805 14th st. n.w. Tel North "FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS. ARMY UNIFORMS—One serge, Khaki, two overcoats and one raincost gond condition. 208 the. K 4. 1e BABY CARRIAGE. Pullman reversible, nat ural color; good condition; reasonsble. 53 R one size 44 mhia n BATHROOM OUTFITS. all new and & teed, $55 up: kitchen sinks of all kinds, $5.25 up: new white vitreous foilet outfis at $19 50 up; mew hotaair furnaces purchased from G ernment at $50: all of our plumbing material fa"sold with & guarantee of ‘moncy back (f you want it.” Sidney Hechinger House Wreck- ing Company, Camp Meigs, 5th and Florida ave. nb".fl Main office, 6th and C s.w. Open 1 channels, T irons: d_mesh: plate angles, plain_and_reinforcing girders suitable for county bridges: steel trusses of 80-ft. spans. The largest selection in the city &t the cheapest price. stored at our p Meigs gronnds only. SIDNEY L. RECH- INGER HOUSEWRECKING 0., Camp M B e office only. 5th ard Fla. ave n.e. CHAIRS CANED, upholstered, porch rockers splinted. C."A._ARMBTROXG, 1233 10th st n.w. Franklin 7483 CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERR! G All classes and repair work of an; ; terms St desired (estimates free). ROBBIN' RAN- DALL CO.. INC., 302 McGill bidg., 908 G at. B.w. Main 3748, Rexidential phone, Lin. 5268, EXPERT HARDWOOD FLOOR FINISHING, painting, by ekilled mechanics at reduced rages of Pari Serene. 908 10th FLITE ELECTRIC CO.—0la specialts: estimates cheerfully given: set quiatated " with our_method of instailing. wir. ing and fixtares. See us first. see us last. be. fore you sign on the dotted line. Main 5938, 46 A nw g EXCAVATING TEAMS, {ranafer and traciors P. T Grady, 1240 house wiring entimates cheetfully give, Queen at. ne._Line, 2352-W. SALERMAN_One radlo. with §300_and car. to teavel; 50% com. Address Box 208-W, Star oftice. = BALESMEN —Experienced, _Inaurance —prefer. red. but not required: estraordinarlly easy selling proposition: permanent; large pay; ad neement to_executive porition. Apply 906 sey building. 12 to 1 caly. 10 and general Rousekeeper; references nired. 2¢ 4222 4th st. n.w. ifl; must be good 00d_room. 1427 Montague_now. HOTSEWORKER — Family, 3 ay night; Maryland or Virginia Il preferred. 3008° Norto, Cleveland P Cleve, 1438, HELP—MALE AND FEMALE. COUPLE, colored: butler and cook. 931 ) n.w. North 3608, MEN AND WOMEN. nesa; froe instructions Te time. Willlam® F. Matteson, a_bldg. = CFFICs _DUTIRR, (yping_and_welling: free room for part-time service. The Plashouse, 1814 N st nw. Franklin 1731 or Franklin 5158, SALESPEOPLE, experienced, for silks and dress goods depart- ment. Apply Supt., Palais Royal, G and 11th Sts. EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. COOKB, two, Arst-ciams, for DAREy and meats: experienced:’ in tearoom or cafe; reference. 1714 9th_st. n. . COOKS (50) wanted, few first-class; Tuesday. 830, 18th Bt Employment Agency, 1536 st PART-TIME WORKERS—Laundresses, cooks, maids, nutses and housemen furulshied. ¥ ICKMAN'S EMPLOYMENT AGENCY_Help of all kinds suppiied. 1837 14th st. Main BUSINESS SITIONS—Free registration. Washington Employment ExXchange; operated for the public by the Washington School for Secretaries. NO CHARGE UNLESS YOU ARE PLACED. Room 213, Transportation Bidg.. 17th and H. INSTRUCTION COURSES. ANNOUNCING THE TELEPHONE SWITCH- board school opening Sept. 2. Class or private instruction, Oxford Bidg., cor. 14th sf De- tween N. Y. ave. and H. A ACTO DRIVING INNTRUCTION o secure fator's_permit. Adamy 4206-J, 3 AUTO DRIVING _LESSONS PRIVATELY en. Call L.ue. 83. We do the rest. Wstem ia commercin] o id, mercial use; aceurate, very rapid, Beat, cheapest; positions guarauteed graduates Bat.'5 ra.” Boyd Bebool, 1848 @ st. 3. 2876 G0OD POBITIONS await graduates. A short intensive course In sborthand, typewriting, bookkeeping, ar eivil service will never regretted: moderate rates; estabilshed 38 yru. all, write or phone. 1t is better to call. nc, 38. " Wood's Camimercial Bchool, 311 East HOYELS NEED ZMRITIOU wen and wommn: Sation wide demaad in ull departments, Botela rooms, cafeterias, clubs, apartment bouses; uncrowded Bald: Ane” livisg, Guiek - advance: ment; our methods indorsed—our students em. plosed by leading hotels everywhers. Open evenings. Call for particulars. Lewis Hotel Training Scbosl. 1840 New York ave. < RADIO INSTRUCTION. Our Fall term will begin Tuesday, Sept. 3, with complete courses ia radio operating and radio_coustruction. The fadio opeiating conrne covers a period of nine months, with classes from 7 to 9 o'clock five nights’ in the weel The radio comstruction course covers fve Soaths, with clasees from 10 to 13 a.m. asd ALL OUR G WEB PLACE ov! fl&.l.?filf- IN LOOMIS RADIO COLLEGE, 5D S it . loyment_whole or A 610-11 " L. colofed: cooking, _wARRInE, housework: references. 8708 GIRL—General housework: 3100 Conn.._Apt.. 344. HOUSEKEEPER, white, between age 28 and 45; no_children,’ no laundry: must have best of retereace. ' Address Bor 08X, Star office. . TIOUSEWORKER, _general: colored woman: references pecessary. FPhone Columbla 1343, ‘9 zeneral Georgia_ave. two in family. FLOORS MADE LIKE NEW BY ELECTRIC machine—New floors Inid. _Floors scraped and finished. J. C. PRICE, 1120 5th n.w. Fr. 6524 dny. North 543-J svenings FLOORN SCRAPED AND FINISHED: PR vAte housework a specialty. J. L. DIND! BECK. _Aflams 5213. 1409 Reimo: FLOORS SCRAPED, CLEAN waxed by electric machine. 9th_st._Col. 4281 FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED, REP'D; SLIP: covers made. Fst. cheerfully given. Returned free. TITTENSOR. 1424 8th n. GAS RANGI ERCILT for $10, Stoves and furnaces of all kinds repaired. Call Franklin 7288, W. P. Watkins, 622 6th n.w. 6 GENERAL REMODELING AND REPAIRING —Estimates free: garages a specialty. P. Bach & Co., 820 7th st. ne. Linc. 6602. SITUATIONS—MALE. ACCOUNTANT-BOOKKEEPER—Seven years' expetience; fast, accurate and reliable; desires 1o beceme associated with & firm where there in chance for future sdvancement. Bos 65-X. Star o BOOKKEEPER, ACCOUNTA! AND TYPE- ist; auto sales and real estate experience. capable of any position of ‘trust; best refer. ence. Address Compton Duvalls 10 N st TOOKKERPER-ACCOUNT, _experienced, de. sires position: competent, reliable: best ref- erences. Address Box 176-W, Star office. 1% colored; best refer- CHAUFFEUR—Frivate: T HOUSE PAINTING. INTERIQR AND EXTE- rlor, by skilled mechanics. Best references. 'aul Serene. 908 10th st. n.w. F. 4891. KEYS_DUPLICATE KEYS, 25 CHNTs. made while you wait. Tumer & Clark. 1233 New Tork ave n.w. Basement. F. 8005, MATTRESS MAKING AND BENOVATING— Mattresses, box eptings, cushions and pillow: renovated at xpecial prices. Special this mont! Mattrenses renovated, $2.50. COLUMBIA BE DING, CO., 616 E st. n.w. Phone Main 5528. MATTRESSES AND PILLOWS renovated at mont reasonable prices. Let us call, give esti- mate. Prompt deliveries and_satisfaction a red. Eagle Bedding Co., 1123 7th sf ences. Apply 1417 Hopkins st. n.w. CHAUFFEUR for private family or light delivery; references furnished. 8 L st. n.w. 1 ain 7902, MATTRESSES AND PILLOWS RENOVATED, jown comforts recovered; reasonable. Nortl ac 10145, _1deal Redding Co.. 1524 Tth st. n.w. ENGINEER or wuperintendent of ofice build- ing of apartment house. Address Box 200-W, Star office. 1 GRNERAL UTILITY MAN—ESperienced. Ad dress Box 96-X. Star office. is JANTTOR, martied, wants smal for for quarters: ‘no children. 14th st o.w. Marshall. REPAIR MAN—Carpentering, painting, pipe fitting. _Addre nofll-,w.,au{':mu'.' e SITUATIONS—FEMALE. BOOKKBEPER-STENOGRAPHER — Can _fur- nish references &s to character and ability; no_objection to leaving city. Address Box 848-W, Ntar office, 5 DRESSMAKING—Ty Miss Bert. Also design® jng. remodelin Prompt service. Col. €227, 1439 _Girard at. . P. B. X. WORK—By young Iady, with seven ears’ central office experience. Address Box 78X, Star office. 4 P. B. X. OR BWITCHBOARD OPERATOR— Young lady; 12 years' experience central of- fice operator and toll supervisor. Address Box 177-X, Star _office. 4 apt. to care Wiite 158 PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING—Get it done right by an American that knows how. Don't worry. See Mr. HILL, 1526 15th nw. PAPERHANGING AND PAINTING—Special prices for 2 weeks only; average size room, seraping, pointing wp cracks and paper with polyehrome paper and binder, $12:; aleo Kitchen walls, $10; woodwork. $3:’ no 'delay: work guaranteed: don't be surprised; we can afford it. Call for estimates. North 1704. PHILA- DELPHIA DEC. €O.. 1730 14th n.w. 3 PAPERHANGING AND _PAINTING - Best work; right price. John H. Erhardt, 631 4th st. Linc. 6406.3. 7 PAPERHANGING done now. Call Modern Paperhanging Co. J. Spiegel. 1132 7th_st. n.w. Franklin 854 g PATERHANGIN ANI: !;AI?T{).\;{[})ERMH\; , $8 and up. . T, 2 282 AND PAINTING — H. E. e. Linc. 3368. Quick, effi- ‘work: reasonable prices. 27% Save moner. 'PAPERHAN Fore ona eterior pammt PRACTICAL, NURSE wishes to take charge and travel; eapable attending to business required._Address Nox 93-X, Star 25" Metropolitan Dee. Co.. PHONOGRAPH REPAIRING — Fhovographs expert: or ail makes ma- e D avitn, SiThe 13 H st. h.w. X, lwl!::b-lfi» Call_Adam: R‘ > B l'n:i':omufiun. :n»lnnc«. and operator of ug! le eeping machine. ggln STENOGRAPHER TYPIST—Take ave: N0 _TUNING—Planos —and piayers re- Fiivad, rehniahed and, tebuilt by skilled work- men. + Piano tuning, $2. Schaefer, Randerson Co., 644 H_st. n.e, Lincoln’ 1067, ING AND HEATING —John B. Gue-ia, Line. 3417_Steam and hot: fice dictation; clerical experience. Fr. 10507, * TYPING to do at home. North 503 after 4. 2* TYPIST—Knowledge shorthand; clerical experience; available September 8. Fhone Clev. 3707. i SITUATIONS—DOMESTIC. CHAMBERMAID, WAITRESS OR GENERAL housework—Neat' colored girl weuts work; ferences. _Call_Franklin 8181, . HAMBERMAID _snd _waitress—By _colored irl; reference. 11th st W, E 0 COLORED WOMAN desires day's m‘.’fl}!—A iDe L} A . G00K . e at 1 wasts piace GOOK. pebllc. o private; #ir v pia o QOOK, 37 Brel-clase, cxperienoed Womdn, U st oW, nm‘munmmlfim&lwumsuh.’ m;n‘:n" and 3 your old retrigerator o Siain ok, [S03 9ih xt.om.we neat H: HOLSTERING AND FURNITUR] pairing, 8lip covers made to order. work, Col. 4038. Stand. Uphol. Co., 2510 14th « 12 OFH NG AND INTHRIOR DEOO- . Juli aburgh want to eall T, S B, vint v o OPHOLATERIYG, ~ SLIF COVERS AND cushions. Phone for samples and estim: Sonthers, Uph. Co., 1207 Dth n.w. Frank. 6110, - D] and e o Silh o SRS 15t st. s.e. Liseoin G quallty &n" oAl .n‘m‘rflu Shaoes, ¥1.13; Nusg anfl'..Mlm 0. ", smplete, davemport, oil range. 1908 RED DAVENPORTS, vers handsome cuf ve lour; also in fine tapestries with hox sprin; and mattress and cedar chest combination than half downtown prices. The Home) , Inc., 1721 Conn. ave. Open Labor FROILER, hot water, large enough to lheat 6-room house; good condition. 115 W st. n.w. R_We can make cheap delive ks at the present time. chinger Co.. Camp Meigs, 5th and Fl in_off B as Apt. 6 Eolden [} NG MATERIALBrick, and sash. complete: <teel 1 ceiling, roofing tin. doors and paint, t tures, hot-water heating plant. % water pipe, 4-inch sewer pipe. clects doors. pariitions_and slate ete. ¥ rames meta 1419 New York ave. n. many wrecking opera together mense_purchases of surplus stock, enabl w doors. sfock i . 6 lights, $1 each: “per q. €(.: new frcproot Tockboard, 3ia¢ per ka. f13 roofing, Capitol. manufactired by Cerfain-ieed Compans, ne Tply. $1.25: 2ply, §1 Dy, $225. Cer- taln feed Company's shingles, 1 in ooe, new. per. sauare. nirick: lninber. now torlet intes Sinks, hathtube and furnaces. New hath- Toilet onthtx, 1 ER HOU R and Florida ave Salemen 2t SID! .. Camp Meigs, Main office, 6th both offices’ until THIRTEEN ¥ ON_ BUILDIN FULLY CHAXDISE RETURNED HAVE ESTABLISH ED THE GOOD WILL OF THIS COMPANY. BUILDING MATERIAL—Resawed new ium. ber and reconditioned building materials ‘will permit you fto_build substantially aod at a Freat saving. Save at least one-third on your Bouse, barn. garage, porch or fence by taking advantage of our low prices on lumber, roof- ing and paints. Framing lumber, 2xi, 2x6, 2x8, etc.; boards. sheathing. siding. partitiog. inths. A great variety of fine pine, oak ant maple flooring at_very low prices.’ Cypress and white pine. Celotex, the master material for sheathing, for plaster base, for inulatio up quickly, takes plaster better than Xeeps out heat and cold, thoroughly and looks well 'simply kal- alate cover: 30 p.m.: RS _SAVING glazed s SUPPLY CO., Inc., 7th, K and Water st w. Ofce and yard open 7:30 fo 5:30. Bat- urday until 1 pom. Phone Frankiln' 2308. YHEADQUARTERS , FOR ECONOMICAL BUILDING MATERIALS.” B NTTURE_The Bargain House, 10-day spe- N T e nex the Ranasoment e of bea: Toom, living room. dining room and davenport bed snites in the city. No. 1, bedfoom suite Handsome American t dresser. chiffrobe. ity, how-end bed. silk laver felt mattress Vanity bench and rocker: 11 ; mpare {ils suite with anv . Twin beds. if desired, at cost of o or F167.50° bedroom i FOR pare them with fhe ¥ ites. as abos are them with an Suite. See onr {0plece Sheraton mahogany dining room suite $295, . Compare it with any $150 Sec ar 10-piece Amerlcin walnut, $1 Com are 1t with any $223. Ree onr 10-plere Eng inly oak sulte, $100. Compare it with an $175.° See our $185 overstuffed bed.davenport Suites. Compare them with any $335. our overstuffed living room suites. $175. pare them with any $275 suites. See our three i 8 reed suite. Compare it with any 195. Ree our three-plece §30 fiber suite. Com pare it with any $48 suite. 50 davenport abies. Compars them with those selling for See our $45 mahogany vARIy dresser Compare it with any $85. See our $5.75 wind sor chairs. Compare them \ith any §8.0 these windsor three-piec 3 straight, rush bottoms, $30 set. Compare them With the $95 sets. See our handsome dinin room chairs, in tapestry, brown ar blue o, Arm and five side, §39. Compare the seis with any $55 set. A full line of living Toom chairs, dressers, chest of drawers, chiffo. rettes, tables, huffets. servers and china clogets, Bookeases, deaks, libraty tables, cousole and end tabiex, floor-table lamps and ahades. New kitchen chairs, $1.50. Kitchen tables and re- frigerators, bookskclves and odd pleces of uil kinds. Seé our odd seftees, day beds. daven pottn. single and double beds, twin. bed: FOrings and mattresses. Our price cannot Deat'fn betn,"springs, and mattresses. We' ou 40% on all high-grade used Koods andle the best new furniture comes to this city. We undersell all. Portieres, com covers and draperies. Watch for “ale that Ix coming off. Ruge—w thia seawon, uth of Columbia road. Open to 1 will take your old furniture ia e; Phone_Adams _4309J.