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Blue Crane Service Chiffon Silk Hose —in all the wanted shades. Carried in our Hosiery Department on Main Floor — Eleventh Street Entrance. PRIVATE AMBULANCES W. CHAMBERS (0. fi PHONE COLUMBIA 432 STOMACH-NOW Step Into any Drug Store. Get ® Box of Pape’s Diapepsin. End Acid Dyspepsia Instantly Mever Feel Droway After Eating As I DId Before Discovering Pane’s Dinpepsin Ught Those sour risings! them with Pupe’s Diapepsin. Almost i 's stomach right-side clated to so quickly h awful misery. Bloat, a*ulence—gone in a No matter w you eat ik to «© dyspepsia, Disgep ¢, day or stomach into sweetness i it and prove it. ge today at any End | LOVE NOTES READ IN $500,00 SUIT ||Clubman Told Her She Was “Girl in a Thousand,” Anne Caldwell, Actress, Says. || By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, December 2.—Miss Anne Caldwell, New York musical re- || vue actress, testifying yesterday in Federal Court in her $500,000 suit for || breach of promise against John W. Hubbard, wealthy Pittsburgh manu- || facturer and clubman, sald Hubbard || told her she was “a girl in & thou- .| sand” and asked her to become his wife while they sat “in a large dreamy ‘| room filled with palms, flowers and potted plants.” The proposal, which Miss Caldwell charged Hubbard later repudiated, was made in an Atlantic City hotel in Jan- uary, 1922, she sald, and added that he told her then they could not be married immediately, explaining that he had a young daughter who would bé married soon. Hubbard told her, Miss Caldwell said, that their wedding would follow that of his daughter. Before testimony In the case was started a supplemental statement of claim was admitted, in which Miss «aldwell charged Hubbard with seduc- tion. The statement was filed after after Judge W. H. 8. Thomson had ruled the evidence on that charge could be admitted in the trial. The ruling followed arguments by counsel in chambers on the question of admit- ting such evidence in a breach of promise suit. A number of love letters which Miss Caldwell identifled as having received from Hubbard during their courtship were read to the jury while she was on the stand. The letzers, which were signed “Jack,” contained endearing ‘erms and made numerous references to “good times” and “parties.” One of them closed with “Be good, my dear, for your papa will know if you are not.” Mrs. W. S. Caldwell of Chester County, Pa., mother of the plaintiff, testified her daughter had not lived at home for the last 10 years, and in 1921, when she became acquainted with Hubbard, was making her home with a married sister in Atlantic City. YOUTHFUL FLYER WAVES TO PARENTS AND FALLS Father and Mother Rush to Crip- pled Plane and Find Son Seriously Injured. By the Associated Press. FORT WORTH, Tex., December 2. —Waving to his parents from a bor- rowed airplane, Thomas Wilson, 17, was seriously injured a moment later | when the machine operated by his | cousin, Robert Brooks, 18, student pilot, nose-dived 200 feet to the earth near here yesterday. Brooks, nt of Forth Worth, but studving aviation at Love Field, Dallas, was only slightly injured. The plane was wrecked. Rushing to the fallen machine, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson learned only then that one of the boys was their son. The lad planned to surprise his parents by flying over their home. . Beaugful Yomes? fo she Gilt-Books o Chistrmas: HEN Christmas brings remind” ers of old friends—brings back THURSDAY. U. S. Bug Experts Put in Strenuous Year [BOARD TO INVESTIGATE Sorting Insects and Hunting New Species| Taxonomists put in a busy year for the Governmeant—not in connection with taxes, taxition or taxicabs, but on_their regular jobs. The acourate identification of in- sects is the work of these scientific experts, and the Department of AS- riculture’s Bureau of Entomology is thelr shop The mere identification of the species of insects sent in from the fleld by the bureau workers and others at home and abroad 1.y an enormous task. In addition, each worker is a research MIAMI AIDING HEALTH. Welfare Director Claims City S8pends Largest Per Capita Sum. A. W. Ziebold, director of public welfare, Miami{, Fla., set forth the health advantages and 1926 reduction in rentals in that section at the week- 1y luncheon and meeting of the Opti- mists’ Club, held at the Harrington Hotel yesterday. Miami {s spending more per capita for public heaith work man who produces and is constantly at work on the study’ and description of species new’ to science and in pre paring data on them for use of scien- tists everywhere. ot Nearly 10,000 species were identified last year from specimens sent to ‘Washington. The greater part of the work was for the Federal Horticul- tural Board, the Government agency which enforves the plant quarantine and protects agriculture from the en- try into this country of forelgn pests, both. insect and plant disease. than any other city in the East, he stated. He also gave a description of his experience during the Florlda storms. ‘The chairman of the Boys’' Club committee reported $248 to be turned over to those in charge of the Boys’ Club work. Frank Plerce, president, presided. . P The Bureau of Chemistry reports that only 5 per cent of the so-called radioactive medicinal preparations contain sufficient radium to be used as therapeutic agents. SCHOOL ATHEIST GROUP 18-Year-Old Youth, Named as Founder of Student Soclety, Plans to Debate Beliefs. By the Assoclated Press. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., December 2.—An investigation will be made by school authorities of the movement started by Hugh Edward Blalr, 18 vear-old student of the Rossville. Ga., high school, to form a junier at soclety in the school, it was learned here yesterday. At “the last meeting of the school trustees a motion was de-' claring that no soclety or club should be organized in the school without the consent or approval of the super- intendent and faculty. Blalr is said to have declared he is an athelst and expects to debate the question with two university of Chattanooga students. Ratifications Exchanged. HAVANA, Cuba, December 2 (P).— Ratifications of a consular convention between Cuba and the United States were exchanged yesterday between Ambassador Enoch H. Crowder and Acting Secretary of State Iturralde. “HE best possible evidence of proved durability, genuine sat- isfaction, and money-saving value—is the fact that many people who bought Vose pianos for over 75 years, today come back with their children and their children’s children to help select their new Vose. The additional fact that over 96;000 have been sold indicates very plainly what has been told the young folks about the piano so cherished by mother and grandmother. We challenge comparison and cordially invite you to call and see and hear this charming piano for yourself. Sold on convenient terms. rrce $850 Droop’s Musi_c Housef—1300 G P e TN, ) Charge Accounts Invited—No Interest or Extra Service Charges Added. We Do Not Penalize Our Friends. Goldenberg’s Are Headquarters for DECEMBER 2, 1926. Lansburgh & Bro. = Announcing—for Christmas Gifts! Blue Crane Hosiery Atmosphere Blonde Satin French Nude Light Beige Opal Gray Stone Gray Moonlight Champagne Grain Rose Gray Sudan Gunmetal Nude Skin Toast Parchment Black K4 ‘A Medium weight for. service— i A garter-run stop line— Extra long pure silk top— A guarantee against runs or rips— $ The fashions of the day, smartly brief of skirt, require that the silk of your hose ex- tend well above the knee—and so it does if Blue Crane is your choice! The extra long pure silk boot, the garter- run stop, patented index glove fitting instep and ankle and sandal foot are exclusive Blue Crane features. —Xmas Savings Checks Cashed— . This Friday's ‘‘Economy News" Deals largely with Xmas Gifts Shop Early and Save Money! Men's Winter 0 Broguc Oxfords $5 Sturdy, rugged tan or black calf, Goodyear Welt, “Hahn Specials.” ~You can't beat them for $5. Women's Oxfords $4.50 Unusually attractive and well made, in tan calf, tan or black Sale Men's Gifty-Socl(s 3 prs., $1.50 Dozens of attractive novelties in wool, silk and lisle and all silk Winter half-hose. Extra- ordinary value—3 $1.50. Sale Men's Xmas Slippers $2.95 High-grade orown eor black kidskin, leatner-unea E etts, Operas ana eiasts Romeos. Very special, Women's Pumps $4.50 Women's Slippers 9¢c A warm, cozy Christmas gift. Felt moccasins, in'a dozen at- those never - to - be - lived - again old times—then your gift-books filled with wic lore—span the bridge of time reflect the images of their givers. Housed in beautiful Globe-Wernicke sectional bookcases, these “'pictures™ peer out invitingly. And the dust- proof easy sliding glass doors on G-W se:tionals protect them—day and night! There's a Globe-Wernicke sectional bookcase for every room in the home —period designs and finishes to match any motif—unpainted too, to be finished as you wish. See them on display at our store rooms —or phone us for a copy of “For in the Home"* baoklet. GlobeWernicke No. 211-223 Investment Building 15th and K Sts. N. W, Washington, D. C. e e—————— To All Who Suffer Stomach | Agony, Gas and Indigestion i Peoples Drug Stores Make This Offer | —_— !Money Back 1f One Bottle of Dare’s Mentha Pepsin Doesn't Do | You More Good Than Anything You Ever Used. ‘With this wonderful medicine you Black, brown or patent leath- er strap-effect, with arch- bracing construction. Phe- nomenal value, for $4.50. Collegiate grain or patent leather, some with lizard trim. - tractive colors, with con- trasting panels, ribbon and pompon trim. the New Style “Blue Crane” Silk Hosiery, Improved - With Additional Length of PureSilk The makers guarantee every pair of “Blue Crane” Silk Stockings and will replace with a new pair any that rip, run or tear. $1 a Pair “Blue Crane” Silk Stockings bought at Goldenberg’s for Christmas gifts will be packed in attractive holiday boxes, Misses’ and Large Girls' Winter Oxfords $2.90 $3.90 Good-lopking Collegiate styles, in tan or black calf, Goodyear welt soles. Special Sll&; 11 to 2, $2.90. 2% to 6, 4-Ble Galoshes $2.45 Women’s high or low heel, warm-lined, ~ $295 uality Arctics. Also girls’ and small boys’ sizes to 2. “Lady Luxury” Silk Hose $1.35 Periect, full-fashioned thread silk stockings, with lisle re- inforced top. Packed in at- tr%ive gift boxes. 2 pairs, §2 selections, rooms- p-Every Room Child's Mo?casins 79c Girls’ and small boys, warm felt, ribbon trimmed mocca- sins, with noiseless, padded = les. Several wanted colors. c Child's Skippers 95¢ “Zoo Pet” high cut novelt Bunny Head slippers wit tinkling bells f movable cs. A - upt ift Child's Shoes $1.79 Under-priced. purchase, good-looking patent or ta: calf boots for small You can be so distressed with gas) Sizes to 11, special ana fullness and bloating that you think vour heart is going to stop ng. b‘;‘o‘us stomach may be so distended that your breathing is short and gaspy. ou think perhaps you are suffo- ¢ and pray for quick eritha Pepsin and in ten minutey |the gas disappears, the pressing on | the hear ses and you cag | breathe deep and natural Ob! What biessed relief; but why not get rid of such attacks all | ? Why have chronic indiges- | tion &t all? can overcome indigestion or dyspep- sia, catarrh of stomach or any ab- normal condition that keeps the stomach in conitant rebellon and one bottle will prove it. Over 6,000 bottles =old in one small New Jersey town last vear—and the | st druggists the country over con-| cede that its phenomenal sales are | due to the fact that the most stub-| a pleasant to take, ing stomach elixir that Peoples Drug Stores and regular pharmacists any- where in America guarantee.—Ad- vertisement. with Christmas card, if desired. Complete assortment of favored shades. BOTH SIDES OF 7™ AT K ST “THE DEPENDAB STORE® HIHINK O Hahn Special . “Health” - Shoes for Women E most practical Winter shoes a woman can pos- sibly buy. With in-built arch supports and other special orthopedic _features, delight- fully comfortable. Smartly fashioned pumps, straps, boo 414 9th 1914-16 Pa. Ave. 3212 14th 233 Pa. Ave. S.E. “Man’s Shop”—14th & G