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b JIFLAT TIRE? "MAIN 500 LEETH BROTHERS o e e MARLOW COAL CO,, EST. 1858 COAL Dependable Quality Reliable Service Fair Prices MARLOW COAL COMPANY 811 E St. N.W.—Main 311 Il Lesson No. 12 Question: Why should soung children receive emul- sified cod-liver oil regularly ? Answer: While milkis the child’s best individual food, it is deficient in rickets-pre- wventing vitamin. That is why so man young children take em sified cod-liver oil as in SCOTT’S EMULSION For Rent Small Office o1 30 Building Centrally located, attrac- tive, street level, office or store, with 12 additional desirable rooms on second and third floors. One of the best located and most attractive in the city. Suit- able for real estate, builder, architect, merchant and many other lines. RENT REASONABLE; good lease. Gardiner & Dent, Inc. | Main4884 1409 L St.N.W. % |8 o'clock, at Bt. Patrick's rectory. .| Lambda entertain || /3 | with a dance at L'Alglon Club, 3 i5| The Canadian Club will have a bridge || * and 500, 8:30 o'clock, at the Hamilton n_ wemi- | receive . on said senn. 4 of one and three. of busi- _Seeretary. HERETOFORE. t G FOMY. OTHER CITY? return load raes ¥ull and part o ire sl 1800 V¥ky ASSOCIATION dge ORDER NEW SHADES NOW! ADAMS LYRON ¢ PRINTING IN A HURRY Mot wade b not Vigh uried, Y yith # OOF WORK 100 et The National Capital Press “Roofs M ade 1 eak Proof [ KNG IRONCILAD Mourins wisios” gty 8, "Morli" 49, -| and harbor improvements, the increase | oyster dinner at the parish hall, Six- teenth and Irving streets | school at 8 o'clock. | terested are invited to attend. o the seut TROOP FUNDS WIN | INHOUSE DEBATE Democratic Effort to Block Money for Foreign Service Is Outvoted. By the Assoclated Press. An unsuccessful move was made in the House yesterday by Democrats, as- sisted by a handful of Republicans, to prohibit the use of Army transportation appropriations for sending troops to any foreign country without specific au- thority from Congress. ‘The proposal, sponsored by Repre- sentative Collins, Democrat, Mississippl, was offered as a rider to the annual War Department supply bill. It was rejected on a stapding vote, 103 to 71. This action came after the House, 140 to 40, had adopted an amendment to increase from $50.000,000 to $55,000,000 the lump sum appropriation for river to be applied mainly to development of | the Missouri River. Representative Bar- bour, Republican, California, in charge of the bill, said he would demand a roll-call vote today on this amendment. The Army transportation amendment | served as a vehicle for a brief discussion of the administration's foreign policy, | especially in Nicaragua. This was ate | tacked by Democrats and defended by Republicans. The vote found 100 Republicans and | 3 Democrats, Carew and Boylan of New York and O'Connor of Louisiana, ing against the proposal, which was pported by 63 Democrats, 7 Republi- | cans and the one Socialist member. The | seven Republicans were Nelson, Beck, Schafer, Browne, Schnetder and Peavy r‘vf vkvlsconsin and La Guardia of New ork. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. ‘TODAY. There will be a joint meeti American !nsmulé' of ecl‘plm i gf gineers, the American Society of Naval Engineers and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 8 o'clock, in as- {sembly hall of the Cosmos Club. A joint dinner will be given, 6:30, at the Cosmos Club. Mrs. Charles Wood will lecture on “Dalmatia,” 8 o'clock, at the Washing- ton Heights Presbyterian Church, under gxeu auspices of the Westminster So- ety. A benefit and bridge party by As- | sistants No. 1, G. P. O., will ybe };Iven. 18:30 o'clock, at Thomas Circle Club, 1326 Massachusetts avenue. The Parent-Teacher Association will have a card party at the Burlington Hotel, 8 o'clock. Brightwood Citizens’ Association will meet, 8 o'clock, in Church of the Holy Comforter Parish Hall. A masquerade social for the benefit of St. Joseph'’s Church will be held in the church hall, Seconds and G streets northeast, 8:30 o'clock. ‘The Capitol City Choir will give a program for members and friends of the National Press Club in its audi- torium at 8:30 o'clock. “Abraham Lincoln, the Tribute of the Synagogue,” will be the subject of a lecture by Rabbi Louis J. Schwefel at the Sixth Street Synagogue tonight. The Woman's Guild of the Church of Our Savior, Brookland, will serve an northeast, from 5:30 to 8 o'clock. - Park View Parent-Teacher Associa- tion will have a card party in the The Big Sisters of the D, C. will meet, Chi Sorority will Hotel. FUTURE. Dayton C. Miller, professor of physics, ing Sound Waves.” The address will be {illustrated with experiments and slides, and especially with the “Phono- deik” for projecting the “living” waves directly on the screen. All persons in- A joint dance will be given, under the auspices of Old Glory Councll, No. 12, and Eagle Counclil, No. 24, D. of A, on Valentine evening, in Oyster’s Audi- torlum, Twenty-sixth and Pennsyl- | DAILY DAIRYETTES No. 54 Vanity “Vanity makes us do more things against inclination than reason.” Rochefoucauld N the time of the French kings, pale- ness was a vanity of the court ladies. They ate harmful herbs to blanch the skin and even magnified their $0rrows so as to look .wan and weak. Van- ity, the enemy within, is what really hronght destruction to the I'rench state. Don't allow vanity—such as diet and incautious Ml dress—to endanger §| vour health, Prevent i destruction 1o your healthy state hy drinking Chestnut Farms Milk daily, It 1 is rated highest by i the District of Colum- bia Health Depart- 1 ment, “The Knowing Mother Will Have No Other”"dp o o QDabry POTOMAC 4000 The Washington Academy of Sciences || will meet February 16, 8:15 p.m., in as- |’ | sembly hall of the Cosmos Club. Dr. Cose Bchool of Applied Sclence, will | speak on “Photographing and Analyz- | EVENING vania avenue. Mrs, Mildred Rock, chairman. Golden Rule Council, No. 10, Daugh- ters of America, will give its annual masquerade Valentine dance February 17, 8:30 p.m, in Pythian Temple. The Woman's Bindery Unlon Local, No. 42, will hold a benefit card party and dance tomorrow, 8:30 pm. at Knights of Columbus Hall. Dancing at 9, The Woman's National Democratic Club, 1526 New Hampshire avenue, will have a program luncheon February 13, 12:30 p.m. Subject: “If 1 XVPl'e ‘Writ- ing the Platform in 1928." Speaker, Roland Morris. The Men's Club of Mount Pleasant Congregational Church will meet Feb- ruary 13, 8 pm. J. H. Taylor, in charge of the Identification Bureau of the Navy Department, will speak of the work of the bureau. Men invited. Refreshments. o wrnsdmmzw‘, (:lmp. onfederate Veterans, entine party and dance February 14, 8:30 pm. at Confederate Memorial Home. Costumes optional. All Con- federate veterans and members of all chapters of the United Daughters of the Confederacy especially invited. Lanier Heights Citizens’ Association meets February 13, 8 p.m,, at the Henry D. Cooke School. H. H. Roberts of the Natfonal Museum will give an {llus- trated lecture on “Scieniific Explora- tions and Discoveries, Relative to Pre- historic Races in America.” Charles T. Clayton will speak of “The Develop- ment of Washington as a World Cen- ter, and Our Part in It.” Families and friends invited. Refreshments. Phi Delta Gamma Sorority and Chi Psi Omega Fraternity of American Uni- versity will give a Valentine dance at the graduate school, 1901 F street, to- morrow night. PLANS POSTER CONTEST: Forestry Association to Award Cup for Best Design. Designed to develop ideas and means of educating the public to greater for- est appreciation and protection, a Na- tion-wide contest for forestry posters is being sponsored by the American Forestry Association, with headquar- ters in Washington. The annual meet- ing of the organization will be held at St. Louis February 17 and 18, and a silver cup, termed “The Forestry Cup,” will be awarded to the organi- zation or agency presenting the best idea in poster form. ‘The announcement, made public to- day. sajd that all agencles in the United States may compete, save those of the Federal Government. ADMR. REMEY ILL. Rear Admiral George Colller Remey, U. 8. N., retired, one of the oldest sur- viving officers of that rank and one of the oldest graduates of the Naval Academy, is seriously ill at his apart- ment in the Grafton Hotel. Admiral Remey is 86 years old. He was retired August 10, 1903. He was born at Burlington, La, August 10, 1841, and was appointed to the Naval Academy in 1855, being graduated four years later. He was commissioned a lieutenant in August, 1861, and served during the Civil War. SPEATH WINS $25 PRIZE. Raymond Speath of the American University won the prize of $25 offered b{ the District Soclely of the Dames of the Loyal Legion to a student of that university for the best essay on Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Speath chose for his subject “Lincoln—the Man." ‘The award will be presented to Mr. Speath at a breakfast to be given at THE jo. 305, Sons of will give a Val- the Willard Hotel by the so- clety, commemorating the 119th an- niversary of the birth of Lincoln. EXPOSITION TO HAVE AIRPLANE DISPLAY Potomac Flying Service Exhibit to Occupy Big Space at Indus- trial Show. A full-size airplane will be set up in the Washington Auditorilum as a feature of the annual industrial show to be staged there by the local Cham- ber of Commerce March 12-17, it was announced today by chamber officials. The airplane will be the exhibit of the Potomac Service, Inc. | Activities of the service will be sct forth on panels bearing examples of | its photographic work, and statements | of its record of passenger transporta- | tion and accomplishments of its flying school. It is planned also to include exhibits of material which goes into the manufacture of planes and instru- ments used in aviation. The plane which will form the chief feature will be a monoplane made by the Berliner Aircraft Corporation. The | engine of this plane will be a Wright | whirlwind, and in_addition to it a cutaway motor will be displayed in co-operation with the Wright Co. This exhibit will be one of the largest in| the show, covering about 1,000 square | feet of floor space. 1 The McCeney Nursery of SHvel Spring, Md., is preparing an exhibit in | conjunction with the aviation display. It will consist of a miniature clubhouse | with decorative landscaping. | MUSIC GROUP HONORS SCHUBERT’S MEMORY University of Maryland Orchestra Devotes Half of Concert Program to Composer. Franz Schubert, the centennary of whose death is being observed this year, was particularly honored last night in the first evening concert of the year by the Little Symphony Orchestra of the University of Maryland at College Park. The program, presented in the college | auditorium, devoted the entire second half of the evening to works by Schu- bert. The famous “Unfinished Sym- phony” was played; Dr.Charles B. Hale | one of the two soloists, sang “The Sere- | bers ‘were “Moment Musical” ‘and | “Marche Militaire.” | The program was opened with Wil- | helm{i’s arrangement for stringed chestra of Bach's “Alr for the G String.” | Ballet music by Gluck followed. Thomas Pyles, the other soloist for the enter- | tainment, played the “Shadow Song” alr from Meyerbeer's opera, “Dinorah,” on the clarinet. ] This Little Symphony Orchestra, of which B. Louis Goodyear is conductor, | is a comparatively new organization | The membership, augmented last night | by Dr. E. P. Cowglll, cellist, and W. F,l’ Doyle, contrabass, includes: Violins, | Elbert J. Howell, Ruth Hays, Harriet Bishop, Jesse Burrhus, Edwin WHL‘E.‘ Sheridan Parris, Albert Cook, Willlam | White, Mrs. Jane Beall, Delmar Bock, | Scott Pollock, Violet Kelk, Sam Fishkin, l Marian Blaisdel, Mary Murphy, David Blennard, Adamar Weingartner, Robert ’ Bowers, Merle Rader: viola, Foster Lipp- | hard; cellos, Olive Kelk and Dr. Cow- | glll; contrabass, W. F. Doyle; clfll’lnc!s,f Thomas Pyles, Delbert Lowe and E Fishbein; bass clarinet, Donald Shook: C melody saxophone, M. R. Hatficld; flute, Parker Cowglll; trumpets, Kermit | Hunt and E. V. Haines; trombones, | Harry B. Hoshall, Joe Fouts, John Cow- | glll, C. E. Grohs; tuba, H. E. Sang- ston: tympanl, Bernetta Derrick; piano. Orris Rader. Tomorrow ,C&\.Z?_mfumh@r@ Sons will announce in this paper the opening of their New Ideal Model Home Completely Furnished by W. & J. Sloane Watch for This Announcement Hessick Coal Hemick Coul is Clean. smoke and requires but itention, Hemsick Coul is a SAFE Fuel. We submit for your exacting homeseekers, Garages and servant Before deciding upon inspection, Pennsylvania Avenue at l,lh Bhieel NW, Dependable Fuel ost substitutes, It burns faithfully and Personal attention, courtesy and full weight cost nothing The drgonne SIXTEENTH and COLUMBIA ROAD NORTHWEST important features connected with this apartment building which have enabled us to satisfy the most Location in residential hub of N.W, " nt to bus and car Large, modern, fireproof building, Spacious light and airy rooms, Apartments freshly decorated yearly, Rentals moderate and reasonuble. Service prompt, quiet and ¢ Continuous phone and elevator service, The z(rgm},ne Is Your Most It is free from the soot and It is economical, and above all consideration some of the Hee a home come in and make nade”; other short instrumeptal num- | il STAR. WASHINGTON, D. ; [_v_vusns ECONOMY RULES 7 | | | | If [\ A&P Macaron;'i&>S;aghE!;|: pkg., 8¢ Mueller’s Macaroni . . . .pkg., 12¢ Can, 14¢c Mueller’s Spaghetti . .......pkg., 12¢ A&P Noodles . . ... ....pkg., 8¢ Karo B. L. Syrup pkg., 12¢ Can, 10c ‘ (o FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1928. THE GREAT ESTABLISHED 1859 d foods of genuine goodness — Nationally serve the home and the budget best. ATLANTIC & PACIE] MAKE CERTAIN OF A SAVING It is as easy to compute the savings made at an A&P Store as it is to tell time by the face of a clock. The savings you make are genuine, and on brands and local favorites—cre sold at prices that TEA co. famous PURE LARD Cartcn or Bulk STRICTLY FRESH EGGS Wildmere Brand—Every Egg Guaranteed Carton i 4 2 c of 1 doz. ADDED SPECIALS—UNTIL SATURDAY'S CLOSING WHITE | POTATOES Fancy Stock—Free from Frost 10~ 23c Fancy Creamery BUTTER Fresh 54c Churned, 1b. Kraft’s newest product with a delicious, mild, snappy flavor that is a real treat NUKRAFT CHEESE rrg. 2lc BUTTER Packed in Lb.’ 580 Pillsbury’s Pancake Flour Add GOLD DUST Let the Gold Dust Twins do your work With a New and Distinctive Flavor. Only Water or Milk for Light and Digestible Pancakes Pk{;. 11c All-Week Specials—Until Saturday’s Closing 1 14-Lb. Prints B Waldorf Toilet Paper 3 r 20 Sultana Maple Bl. Syrup Crushed Corn A&P Fancy Gold. Bant. Corn, can, 19¢ Early June Peas. ... .........can, 10c || Reliable Fancy Peas. . ... .. .can, 15¢c | Iona Lima Beans. .. .........can, 9¢ P SIMPSON'S | | FREE! FREE! Pasteurized MILK Finest Pasteurized Milk from Gout. inspected farms r.8¢ o.13c FREE! with each purchase of gny size Crisco The Save-all Pie Plate is a large, ‘K\d"", adapted to making deep dish pi 1 it ) Until Saturday’s closing we are giving i Cne Save-All Pie Plate 1-Lb. Can 25¢ tical one, espe- ~ 80’CLOCK || | COFFEE || Highest Quality Santo | . J \ g S = i J Jello, all flavors. ..........pkg., 9¢ Sugar-Cured Pink Salmon. ....... Royal Gelatine, fruit flavored, pkg., 9¢ Argo Red Salmon. . Knox Gelatine ....phkg., 19¢ Hams ’ Ib-’ 23c Gorton’s Shredded Codfish. . .can, 12¢ Sweet Potatoes| | Fresh Spinach Bananas ...................doz., 35¢c | Iceberg Lett FloridaOranges . . .......... .doz.,45¢c Florida Grapefruit . E—— Cooking Apples. . . . ..........21bs., 13c Eating Apples. . .. ...........31bs., 25¢ YellowOnions .. ...........31bs., 10c Cauliflower Fresh Fruits and Vegetables New Cabbage . New Carrots ... ...... New Potatoes. ... ..........41bs., 25¢ i FreshTomatoes L. 15¢ uce.............head, 10c CrispCelery. . ..............bunch, 10c Ko . .head, 25¢ ee...db., 8¢ .bunch, 5¢ il i Del Monte | HouseholdNeeds | Cereals Asparagus Tips. . . venic in 19c l | Pacific Hand Soap. . . ...** 10c | ’ Mell-o Wheat 3 15¢ Peaches . ....... buftet sise go i! *; Sl:’:""o" PN '::"g: :“ ‘; Cream of Wheat ",:““ 14¢ " I uper Suds kg, I o g ;“fhe; : Salad. . .I:I::lfl tn — 1‘ Old Dutch Cleanser. .2« 15¢ || A&P Oats 3, - RATRTER R, -« 15¢ || SOS Steel Wool. . ...2 ™ 25¢ | | Quaker Oats. .. " 1lc Che»:nel ...... sle ‘:"" e 12¢ i {‘ Ammonia ....... Jettle g |l Ralston’s b e 24¢ 35.'.'.‘.:';1; neEnars ggt‘ || La France Powder......"* 9c | | Wheatena .. ... " 22¢ e 0. can C 2 cakes Sardines " Tomato 13¢ I ' g’.‘,’f}co‘f:"’ i " can 13: H Shredded Wheat " He i Nauce tn ) , e ) \\Post Toasties. . . . . bl jia - —— —— e \\ Frivay and Saturday Meat Tender Three-Cornered| Loin or Chuck Roast Roast Beef . 21c L. 25¢ filarkit Pork Roast Syecials Shoulder Lamb Roast Lo. 25¢ Rib Auth’s Products Shoulder Lamb Chops. .1b., 33¢ . Lean Stewing Lamb. . . .1b., 15¢ ;:,T: "’!:JS?;;.'.'I:O." ',l:,' ;g: LofMer’s Liver Sausage. .1b., 35¢ Smoked Braunschweiger, 1b.,40c | Fresh Hamburg Steak. .1b., 25¢ : Lean Boiling Beef . . . . . .1b,, 17¢ Groon Linte. . b Y66 | Smohed Sausage. .. Ib 35c Sausage Meat . .. ......1b., 3¢ Sliced B'fast. Bacon. .V, Ib., 19¢ Smoked Sausage. .....Ib., 35¢ Very good Sauerkraut, qt., 12" y¢ Luncheon Specials Brigg's Honey Kist Loaf, Ib., 45¢ Sliced Cooked Ham . .\, Ib., 15¢ Brigg's Ham Bologna, ' Ib., 20¢ Chipped Beef . . .... .\, b, 15¢ Braunschweiger . .. .\4 Ib., 20¢ Pimento Loaf L lb, 10¢ Veal Bologna. ..... .\, b, 18¢ Salt Water Oysters . . . . . . pint, 35¢; quart, 65¢ R e ————