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BE GLORIFIED! Nine exquisite flesh- tones intensifyingthe beauty of each type. LES POUDRES FLAT TIRE? Call Fr. 764-5-6 Priced According ! Applied to Distance 50c to $1.00 $1 Limit LEETH EnOTHERS Spare Tires ain 500 4" Gentleman’s Country Estate In Nearby Montgomery Wonderfully Landscaped Grounds All Necessary Outbuildings for Light Farming ed 9-room resi- bedrooms), 2 bat . large old-fashioned kitchen: hot-water heat and electric lights. "A Bargain At $42,500 Phone M. 9300 Until Q‘P.M. Pheips 1417 K St. Main 9300/ s | the footsteps of his father in farming. | BOOKS WANTED in any euantity “Bring them in” or Phone Franklin 5415 ] BIG BOOK SHOP 933 G ST. NW. % A TSR RIS GARAGE or WAREHOUSE Second commercial zone. Fine three-story brick building in the heart of downtown business section, containing 5,500 square feet on each flocr. Very desirable for garage, ware- bouse, manufacturing plant, wholesale or retail business. This property is priced below reproduction costs for immediate sale. Busiress Property Department CAFRITZ 14th & K Main 9080 { SPECIAL NOTICES. 76 MIMBOGRAPHED LETTERS §125: MUL. ligraphing. Printing Addressing, eic. ACE LETTER BHOP, 203 District National 8ank Butiding. 1 _Pr_7143_Open 8:30 am T WILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR NO DEBTS other than those contracted by me. ALEXANDER REIN. - e 30 6th 8t. BE._ 26" OF AND HEREAPTER. 1 WILL NOT BE RE ] any debts contracted by a FREDK. H G!uLERzfifél RAY-HONSICK THE Lutber “net Co. s composed of R Reyang § 4 r. was dissolved Aor dersigned tions 1n- HER R.RAY. HONSICK. Jr._* PAINTING. GUTTER- onasie prices. Col 7311 ot Roofing Co.. 1839 Kal rd NOT RESPONSIELE POR ANY DEBTS ted for or by r than mysell \GRUDER. _ ne _ 25° ELBEWHERE? _OUR 11 serve you better Uies Call Mai & STORAGE_CO JRNTTURE Rich 1343 4 STORAGE Nort ROOF PAINTING “ PRINTING IN A HURRY High €r ' This Millio Printing Plant —is &t your service o receive car The National Capital Press 3209-4214 1 BL_NW Phone_Main 85 IRONCLAD’S ROOFERS savice or IN sraer oo small attention s 1o give you our 1068y algays ready roof ~ Bel sefe un low cher IRONCLAD &'y 9in #nd Evarts Ste NE phones Norih 26 -North 21 g o Ger Ready Now With New WINDOW SCREENS MADE TO ORDER the finest mesh wire KLEEBLATT Wision Busces and Screens Reliable We use "ih AW v, N1 Phone Lin. 876, { | ’m 13th St. N.W. l GOODING EXPIRES | [ evmtce pew AFTER OPERATION | Idaho Senater Had Gone to| Home for Recuperation. | Career Brilliant. | By the Ascociated Press. GOODING, Idaho, June 25.—Death | has terminated the second term of Sen- ator Frank R. Gooding of Idaho. | The junior Republican Senator from Idaho died vesterday at the home of his daughter in the little town he | founded and which bears his name. He came here to rest after an operation the forepart of this month. He had Inot been in the best of health since | contracting influcnza at Washington. in | December last. Death was attributed to cancer of the intestines. Was Former Governor. Senator Gooding started his politi- cal career as governor of this State | {during the turbulent day when “Big | Bill" Haywood was on trial, charged | with implication in the slaying of Gov. | Frank Steunenberg. Following two | terms as governor, he returned to active ! direction of his sheep business. | In 1918, Mr. Gooding again b(‘clme1 |a candidate for public office and was defeated for the Senate by John F.| { Nugent. Entering the race again in! 1920, he was successful and since his| | slection to the Senate centered his at- tention on freight rate surveys and was | instrumental in drafting several rate bills. He also was chairman of the spe-| cial Senate committee assigned to in-' vestigate living conditions in the East- NATOR GOODING. FINDS WOAN DEAD INLOCKED HOUSE Policeman Discovers Body of [ pls, coleague Senator ienas | Mrs. Margaret Bauer—Cor- | |ihe belief Mr. Gooding failed to take| - ¥ { oner Investigates. | sufficient_rest’ after his illness in De- | cember. Senator Borah said || “Senator Gooding was a hard work- |ing and devoted Senator and I have no | : ; =l doubt that remaining with his duties| Notified by an employe of the Wash- | |too long aided in bringing about his _ington Gas Light Co. that he was un- ooty ['able to gain entrance to 3540 Rock S 43 . . | Creek Church road. Policeman C. N Funeral Rites Wednesday. | House today svent to that address and Mrs. Gooding and three children. | found the body of Mrs. Margaret M | John Gooding. Mrs. Maud_Paul and | Bauer. | Mrs. A J. Schubert, at whose home| It was necessary for House to force | the Senator died, were at the bedside.| open a window in order to gain en- | Senator Gooding was 69 years old. | trance to the premises. Newspapers |~ Tentative arrangements provided for | found on the front porch dated June ! funeral services at the Schubert hom e | 13, indicated she had been dead since | Wednesday under the direction of the that time. Masonic lodge. | Police were told that Mrs. Bauer has — | lived alone in the house since the death Although a native of England. Frank, of her husband, Jacob M. Bauer, some R Gooding often was described as & time within the past year. Her three “typical Westerner.” | children, two daughters and one son, His progress as a Westerner may be | have been dead for several years, it was | said o have started when he became a | said. | | homesteader in Idaho, engaged in the | Coroner J. Ramsay Nevitt prrrnded} | cattle businsss and interested himself in | the arrival of Lieut. Edward Kelly of | | politics and the affairs of the State. _|the Detective Bureau homicide squad | Eventually he ranked as one of the'and announced that he would issue a | | largest stock raisers in the State, was | certificate of death due to natural ! elected governor for two terms and then | causes. A son-in-law, E. R. Feal. 3363 | United States Senator. | Eighteenth street. agreed to take charge Senator Gooding was 8 years old when | of the body and have it prepared for | his parents brought him from England. | burial. | where he was born October 16. 1859.| Feal told investigators that Mrs. Baur {The family settled in Michigan, and the | was an orphan before her marriage, her | future Senator received his education in | near living relatives being some cousins ! | the public schools of Paw Paw. After | who live in Baltimore and whose name | | nine years the family moved to Califor- | he thinks s “Klessener.” nia, and when Prank became of age he | When House entered the house he | decided to make his home in Idaho. | found a canary bird in a cage in ihe { Granted Homestead. Kitchen. The bird was near a state of | e o collapse from lack of food, but quickly | | There for nine vears he followed the | FOURREE U0 'O B 0%, M SR mining contracting business in the Woo 5 5 River country, when he was granted a | fl"fl 53;&?2? ‘lma“_‘e;-‘w( i | homestead site and determined to follow | A& Porioet o Jaltagle BRBERR, tnc s | found in a drawer in a buffet in the dining room. Although the house in | His name was given to the town of | Gooding, which sprung up, as well as to | the country in which it was located. Later a Methodist Episcopal institution ! Jocated on part of the original home- | stead site and was given the name of | Gooding College. The Senator became | { one of its principal financial supporters. | ‘While his business ventures prospered | and expanded, Senator Gooding's influ- | ence in politics became wider. He ad-| vanced from the local field to election | as State Senator. and later was chosen chairman of the Idaho Republican Stete | central committee. Elected governor, he served two terms, 1905-1908, and during | the World War was fuel administrator | for his State. | | In November, 1920, Mr. Gooding was | elected United States Senator, but be- | | fore beginning his term he was appoint- | {ed to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator John F. Nugent. | He sponsored during his first term the | Gooding “long and short haul bill, | | which sought to prohibit a higher rail- road freight rate charge for a short haul | than for a longer one through the same | | territory. | Favored High Tariff. ‘[ Senator Gooding in 1924 was charged with having used his official position to obtain War Pinance Corporation loans to the exclusion of smaller farmers in his State. Although exonerated by lhe‘ War Pinance Corporation in a report to | the Senate, he demanded an investiga- tion of the charges by a senatorial com- mittee * ! Representatives of the Idaho Grange, { who had preferred the charges, failed | | “\o appear before the committee in sup- | port of them, and the committee de- | clared the accusations unfounded. | He was re-elected in 1926. ‘The Senator was a consistent advo- ca‘e of a high protective tariff and was | regarded as a “regular” in his support | [l | of Republican party measures. { | Senator Gooding was the fourth mem- | |{il | ber of the Senate to die within the past year, the others having been Senators { Jones, Democrat. of New Mexico; Fer- | ris, Democrat, of Michigan, and Willis, | Republican, of Ohio. | Waterproof— Fadeless— | 'EVENING STAR CLUB fair—Fishermen Have Poor Luck. The Summer outing of The Evening |Star Club was held yesterday at the Casa Del Rio Inn on South River. Ap- proximately 175 members of the club at- tended | Many members went by private auto- ! mobiles, and others in a large bus, early | the morning. Following breakfast at | the inn, they hoarded a large hoat and were taken to the fishing grounds. The general report upon their return to | shore was, ““There are no fish in South | River or the Chesapeake Bay." Pollowing dinner at the inn, President | Prank Hurley announced a program of |various indoor sports, while others | donned bathing suits i ERUPTIONS RUPTIONS are frequently caused by surface infec- ton. A true germicide such as Zonite can clear them up. Forty times stronger than peroxide, yet harmless to the tissue! That is Zonite. Simply apply to each center of infection. Disinfects and helps to heal. onite At all drug stores of the deli Pekoe Tea. kins Orange Pekoe. RS Main 48748852 W. STOKES SAMMONS, Proprieior 3 - HE taller the glass the higher your estimation us flavor The more you have of it, the more you know you can't be without it. like the scent in an old-fashioned garden, its flavor holds you with its quality. your first package will be re- funded if you send the unused part of it to us, should you not find the fragrance of a thousand flowers in a single sip of Wil- WASHINGTON, !‘f Will Rogers | HOUSTON.—The following three events have caused more talk at the conventions than Keynoter Fess forgetting his speech: First, Mary Pick- ford nicking the Government for three thousand bucks. Mary is not only our sweetheart, but our best bargain hunter. Then May Mur- ray, with no pre- liminary advance notices has a baby 16 months old, which was thought an un- heard-of feat, even in the mov- ios. Then Tem Hef- lin's platform col- lapses. That was the first platform crash of the politi- cal season. Two others will follow in_order. P. S.—Houston is as cool and sober as Beverly Hills. ALICE IN WONDERLAND MANUSCRIPT IS SOLD | | By the Assaciated Press | PHILADELPHIA. June The | original manuscript of Lewis® Carroll’s | “Alice’s Adventures Under Grmmd“'i later published as “Alice’s Advantures | in Wonderland,” has been sold with | other items of his for $150.000 to a | well known American collector. who wishes his identity to remain secret The sale was made known by Dr A. S. W. Rosenbach of this city, who bonght the manuseript in London on | April 23 Rosenbach paid $77,000, said to have been the highest price ever paid for a single book or manuscript | at auction in England | A presentation copy of a_ first issue | of the book, in the original red cloti binding. bears the date of 1865, and | contains a presentation inscription from Lewis Carroll to Mrs. G. Lilti» | Craik, author of “John Halifax, Gentle- | man.” For this volume Dr. Rosenbach | paid $25.000 | Throngh the courtesy of the new | owner the manuscript is to go on pubii: | view June 27, in the Philadelphia Free Library. EIGHT SAILORS INJURED IN ITALIAN SHIP BLAST | By the Associated Press. BEAUMONT, Tex.. Italian sailors were in a hospital here | last night, two possibly fatally infured, | as the result of an _explosion on board | the Italian tanker Capena as she lay at the Magnolia Petroleum Co.’s docks. | Vincent d'Alba, ship’s cook, who was | standing watch at the time of the ex- | plosion, and another of the sailors were in a critical condition. The other six in the hospital were expected to re- cover. Fumes from gasoline loaded in two_hatches became ignited and the June 25.—Eight | forward quarters of the sleeping ci which Mrs. Bauer lived is an old frame structure. police were told that she owned the practically new brick houses on either side of that occupied by her | D, THE GREAT WHERE ECONOMY RULES” Heinz Beans Oven Baked 3 Sm. Cans 25c Heinz Spaghetti with cheese and tomato sauce 3 cas 25¢ Heinz Ketchup e dae 23c Bottle Heinz Vinegar Cider or White Pint I 2'/2(: Snowdrift Lb. 95 Large Bottle i SHADE Your Home With Dupont’s Tontine! Washable— Economical— Beautiful! N S AN of Wilkins Orange Its aroma charms The moderate price for WILKINS ORANGE PEKOE 1ER > In 10c, Yj<db. and '4<lb. packages Can Wesson Oil rine 29c Ta Shaker Sa't Pkg., 9¢ Light Meat Tuna Fish. .. Gorton’s Brick Codfish. . Pink Salmons'. ... ... . T Pet Milk | on 5%ec & 1lc ; Sm. s G Gn 5 Van Camp’s Bean Hole Beans 2 cams 25¢ Sunsweet Prunes 1-1b. it 12c 2-1b. . 2le Del Monte Peas Small Sifted can 17¢ Del Monte Fruits for Salads - ihe i 2% Tin Del Monte Sardines Bananes Dozen, 27¢ Rhubarb . . ... Red Radishes . . . Carrots . . .. Texas Onions Lb., 5¢ = | Shoulder - LAMB ROAST i 929c Lamb Paddies ) § 2.1b. box, [ 8¢ 108 OR BORDEN'S MILK Dozen, 33¢ : ! Nfl;)lf,a?::age S ISL[)S. 27c s 0., MONDAY, JUNE 25 1928 LANTIC & PACIE] Compare r These Prices with what you pay elsewhere. values that have made the A&P LEADERS inQUALITY & LOW PRICES! Just a few cutstanding § ;5 pett” CORN FLAKES Shredded Wheat. . . .. .. .pkz- 10c Kellogg’s or Post Toastie Corn Flakes. . . .2 "%+ 15¢ Kellogg’s Pep . . .. e L e e D (507 Tl ] e I e s [ MAXWELL HOUSE | § EVAP. MILK COFFEE—G ood to () White House 9 tall she IR0, . 1B 49('5 B B0 Fancy Creamery Butter. . ......... wae I 508 Sunnyfield Butter, /4-1b. prints. . . .. ... 53¢ Wildmere FreshBgge. ... ..... .. . oeotis 30 Pure Lard PANCAKE FLOUR 2rie. 15¢ Double-Thick Stay Crisp in Milk Fresh and Crisp in Airtight Containers Insures Perfect Griddle Cakes A Pure Mixture N. B. C. Cakes All Small Packages Zu-Zu 2 Phes. 9C Lemon Snap Ete. Royal Gelatine 3 Ascorted Fruit Flavors 3 rres. 23c Jell-O All Flavors 3 Pk 23c¢ Clicquot Club Ginger Ale and Sarsaparilla 2 Bottles 29(_‘ c&C Ginger Ale Imperial Dry Bottle 1 4C Hires Root Beer and Ginger Ale Extracts Bottle 20 S R AR A A A A AR Y Our Stores Are OPEN All Day WEDNESDAY \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\( > blet Sugar S Light or Dark 5c i [ RO | s oSsEgee Plain Olives. CARNAT A AL S S RRRRR SR SN A&P Brand 1lc 15¢ &an OSSR SRS SR ANNN Abner Drury Widlar’s Asst. Pickles. ) v Pure Preserves | { { Grape Juice Plus A&P Bran: Deposit LR sl Ofiver . . .......... WEEay oo o IRTNERTES Asst. Jelly Sultana Brane G AT 10c ! ¢ LIFEBUOY SOAP (j’ak('s 1 7c Window Screens. .............. 3 4fe; %3 57¢ Togllont Fly P . . . ...ciivvsie SN0 Tanglefoot FlyRibbons. . . . .............. Y™ §e Fly Swatters, long handle. . ..............%" 5¢ Dethol for flies, insects, etc.. . . . 5" and pint liquid 790 BlachBlag: ..o o ove s SO SNR plnt Beutr iy Giant Drain Pipe Solvent. RO o’ | Delicious, Ripe WATERMELONS FEach, Shriver’s or Dromedary Grapefruit For Salads—Breakfast—Picnic | Can 3 C Gold Medal Cake Flour For successful cake baking Pre. 23cC Pabst-ett more than cheese rre. 19c Royal Baking Powder e dae e a8e Simpson’s Milk Pint 7c Quart 13¢ Lemons § NE | POTATOES . bunch 30 E y ) Bl - Ear Corn 2 bunches 7 c ! 5 Lbs. 9c : | Meat filarkgi Specials | Bunnypety” Sliced Bacon 2 phg., Lean f § Smoked Hams { i 1 er whole, i 5 16c v 32c| Tongue Loaf .. Honey Kist Loaf. .. Smoked Sausage. . a { Coml BRI o vcivvon e NS Pipw TR TSR A e A GO B CRDs B v . i ibiiasey YRR | - e Fillet of Haddock . 17¢ Flake | Crab Meat | L. 45¢ Fresh Peas 2 lbs., 19¢ Green Peppers . . . B .« ociine f Lettuce Head, 10c 3 3 lbs., 25¢ String Beans 2 lbs., 25¢ Lisoh sbiveic RSO T e (. o { Tomatoes For Stewing Veal Paddies « 30c |