Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SACKETT 0PPOSES - LENS I CENLS Proposal by Kentucky Re-| 'publican Arouses Round of Discussion in Senate. By the Associated Press | A proposal by Senator Sackett, Re- | publican of Kentucky, to exclude alien: from the census enumeration upo which representation in the House | would be computed caused a round of discussion in the Senate yesterday, but a vote was not reached. ! The Kentucky Senator’s amendment | was considered the most controversial | subject relating to the census meuure} and if a vote is taken Monday final action on the bill is expected soon afterward. Senator Sackett contended that it | was un-American and not in keeping | with the ideas of the founders to con- | «ider aliens in arriving at representa- tion in a branch of the Government. | ‘He declared that there were more than 5.000,000 allens concentrated mostly in | the great cities of this country, and | that this would mean about 10 Repre- | sentatives. ! Sees Blow to Farm Sections. “The rural sections which need the | help of Congress most,” he declared, “would be deprived of representation at the expense of the cities with their alien hordes.” ‘The Kentuckian was asked by Sen- ator King, Democrat, of Utah whether the founders of the Government did not contemplate a great influx of aliens and had meant they should be counted. Sackett asserted that the founders did | contemplate immigration but said laws had been provided to make them citizens. | Opposing the amendment, Senator | Walsh, Democrat, of Montana deciared | that it would be “most unfortunate if | Congress should disregard a plain pro- | vision of the Constitution.’ If the proposal were put forward as an amendment to the Constitution, how- ever, he said, it “would be difficult to find arguments against it.” This position also was taken by Sena- tor Borch, Republican, of Idaho. Blaise Favors Bar. Senator Hawes, Democrat, of Mis- souri, asserted that the present law “gives 6,000,000 aliens an annual po- | litical prerogative. | Senator Blease, Democrat, of“South | Carolina, said he had “nothing against | the alien, but I am an American above everything else.” “I don't believe,” he said, “that these | sliens ought to enjoy the same pri: leges we do as soon as they get here.” Senator Bratton, Democrat, of New Mexico, contended the Constitution had clearly intended aliens should not be counted, because it defined ‘‘persons” &s meaning people either born in this country or naturalized after they ar- rived here. Senator Walsh said he could not subscribe to this theory, con- tending that the Constitution merely explained what was meant by a citizen. | THEATER IS PACKED " FOR PUPILS’ REVIEW | Enthusiastio Audience Sees Annual | Presentation of Hoffman- Hopkins Cast. =i Presenting a colorful jazz review, Hoffman-Hoskins pupils made their an- nual appearance behind the footlights Friday night before an enthustastic audi- ence of parents and friends, which packed Keith's Theater. Bizarre and beautiful costumes, artis- tic settings and a bevy of lovely young- sters, marked the presentation, desig- nated as the “Holiday Revue.”. Among the high spots were the unusually artis- tic dance interpretation which went along with Billy Bombrest's song “On the Chest of the Wave,” in which Mil- dred and Billy Bargagni were especially effective as the “Pacific_Ocean;” the clever stepping of Ruth Brill, who as- sumed varied character roles, the stel- lar performance of young Jack Day in several numbers, the graceful dancing of Flora Blumenthal and the pictur- esque “Cotton Picking Time,” in which the costumes were effective and the chorus well drilled. “Doin’ the Rac- coon,” starring Julia Cunningham and “the boys,” was highly amusing. Jock McLean, young son of Edward Beale McLean, was featured in a tap dance number. The cast included the following: Ardella Burrell, Mildred Bargagni, Annie Carpenter, Muriel Craven, Julia Cunningham, Alicia Ghormely, Marga- ret Kirschner, Frances Nettleton, Helen Whitmer, Frances Luchs, Dorothy Cor- bett, Althea Grosser, Catherine Rice, | Marie_Bonbrest, Marjorie Fuller, Flor- ence Embrey, Ruth Hohberger, Leona Applebaum, Flora Blumenthal, Jane Stanton, Marion Wolberg, Mary Ann Stake, Doris Neuman, Jane Bradbury, Ann Bono, Margaret Mary Edmonston, Betty Ann Swagart, Lorraine Imlay, Miriam Reside, Janette Jones, Dorothy Lee Counselman, Betty Ann_Hurley, Margery Jaffe, Jane Krey, Elizabeth Avery, Adelle Sterns, Jane Hurley, Helen Fay Smith, Lilllan Hoffman, Ellen Bono, Georgette Cohen, Eleanor Blumenthal, Nancy Sigmund, Lillian Stroman, Norma = Jones, Marguerite Morrison, ~ Bernice Gerring, _ Bet- ty Allen, Elizabeth Ann Taylor, Marghietta Stirling, Elaine Kronheim, Ned McLean, Jack Day Eddie Clark, Jack Stake, Billy Bronbrest, Warren Brill, Robert Dickinson, Donald Dun- lap, Paul Owens, Frances Luchs, Helen Permut, Helen Brylawski, Betty Scott, Dorothy Rosasco, Patsy Long, Kathryn Dengler, Doris Hohberger, Evelyn Bild, Mary Hampton, Charlotte Tilley, Mary Alice O'Conor, Eileen Pallas, Isabel Hamilton, Helen Whitmer, Marguerite Licarione, Marjory Mitchell, Dorothy Lee Counselman, Ruth Brill, Florence Mathieson, Lydia Brizi, Catherine Bild, Mary Elizabeth Bush, Helen Gwinn, Elizabeth Ann Gude, Audrey Heathcote, Anne Heine, Violet Llubra, Marion ‘Thomas, Jean Thomas. Prances Brooke. Evelyn Raynor, Rhoda Lichtman and Billy Bargagnl. HUSBAND IS FREED IN VIRGINIA SLAYING Chatham Jury Acquits Douglas Barker, Who Shot Frank Carter, Painter, Five Times. Bpecial Dispatch to The Btar. CHATHAM, Va., May 25.—The un- written law was successfully raised here vesterday and brought acquittal of i)ouxlu Barker, cotton mill worker of Bchoolfield, who shot Frank Carter, a painter, five times last April. The State proved that Barker, after firing two bullets which brought Carter to the floor of the store in which they met, stood over him and fired three more, saying “if that doesn't finish him, let me know.” then walked from the store and awaited officers to whom he explained that Carter had tried to “break up my home.” The defense relied entirely on the W. Hawkins and H. R. Owen, all of the the building. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MAY 26 Officials yesterday inspected the Department of Commerce foundation, where Pr stone Monday afternoon, June 10, and made plans for the ceremonies. Left to righ 3 d Public Parks of the M chief clerk and superintendent of the Department of Commerce, and F. M. Kramer of York & Sawyer, architects for Office of Public Buildings an 7 ! 1 ident Hoover will lay the corner| Gill, George W. Barkman, S. ational Capital; E. W. Libby, —Star Staff Photo. WILL BE SHO Says Dr. Davi A collection of plants that devour animals is being assembled by Depart- ment of Agriculture experts for the national flower show of the American Hortjcultural Soclety at the Willard Hotel June 7 and 8. ‘The star attraction of this collection probably will be the voracious Venus fly txap, according to Dr. David Lumsden of the Department of Agri- culture, chairman of the special ex- hibits committee. This strange plant- animal, called by Charles Darwin “the most wonderful plant in the world,” is strictly confined to a few hundred square miles on the North and South Carolina coasts and seldom is seen outside this area. Ever since its dis- covery it has proved an enigma to biologists and students of evolution. ‘The leaf is formed in two parts, appearing like an open mouth. On | the inside of this mouth are a few| extremely sensitive bristles coated with | nectar. When an insect stimulates two | of these bristles the mouth snaps shut with lightning-like rapidity. The im- | prisoned creature is drowned in a se-| cretion of digestive fluid exuded by the plant and practically everything except the outside shell is absorbed. Insects| a rge as bottle-files are caught. The plant is a voracious eater. Plant Puzzles Botanists. Unexampled elsewhere in nature, the | mechanism of the Venus fly trap is| only vaguely understood. It apparently | parallels in the plant world a highly developed nerve reflex in animals, but| there are no nerve fibers to carry the impulse, and, so far as botanists can determine, there is no central nervous system or “brain,” When ‘a sensitive bristle is stimulated it sends an impulse of some kind, {ouibly electrical in nature, through the sap of the plant which in some way operates the mecha- nism of the mouth. o Two bristles must be stimulated be- fore the mouth snaps shut. This saves the plant from wasting its energy over inanimate objects blown into the mouth by the wind. The evolutionary | origin of this plant-animal never has | been satisfactorily explained. It ap- parently cannot be traced to the orig- inhal division between the plant and animal kingdoms, but developed from some ordinary plant because of spe- cial conditions in its restricted envi- | ronment. The plant depends almost entirely on animal food. Its roots serve only as anchors and not as organs for lb-, sorbing fods from the soil, as in the | case with ordinary plants. It is the nearest approach, Dr. Lumsden_ says, to the plant-animal monsters of fiction which are described as devouring hu- man beings. Sarracenias Second Feature. The second feature of the collection will consist of the sarracenias, which | are found in scattered localities all" over the Eastern United States, espe- PLANTS THAT EAT ANIMALS Venus Fly Trap to Be Feature Attraction, Charge of Exhibit. WN AT WILLARD d Lumsden, in clally in the South. These have hol- low leaves in which rain water col- lects. Openings are provided with downward-pointing bristles, coated with nectar. Coming in the direction of the bristles, the insect can enter easily, but cannot escape. Eventually it becomes exhausted, falls into the water and drowns. Then it is digested by a fluld -secreted from the plant. These plants also obtain very little nourishment from the soil. Some of these grow as high as two feet and at the end of a Summer will be half filled with the shells of unlucky insects. Of the same family are the East In- dian nepenthe and the Darlingtonia of | California. The latter have the nectar | secreted along a spiral runway about | an inch long which the insect follows into the cup which proves its death chamber. One California company re. | cently collected large number of these from the swamps and advertised | them as fly traps for household use. | But outside their native envirorment | they can be kept alive only with ex- ert care and do not function well as | insect eliminators. Although working with the same sort of digestive apparatus, Dr. Lums- den points out, the sarracenias and nepenthes are entirely passive, while the Venus fly trap is essive. Both are largely deficlent in the chlorophyll, | or green coloring matter in the leaves, | by means of which most other plants | are enabled to live through synthesis | of sunlight, and hence are a distinct | step toward the animals. | Sun Dew to Be Shown. Other animal eating plants which will be included in the collection are the tiny sun dews, well known all over the world, but whose diet of living crea- tures is unsuspected, With these the mechanism consists simply of glands, or sticky, waxy globules on the leaves, upon which the tiny insects are stuck. Then the little plants proceed to absorb the nutritive elenients of their bodies. | The dates for the exhibition, which previously have been tentative due to the dependence of the blossoming sea- son on the weather, now have been definitely fixed for June 7 and 8. Large | numbers of flowers already are arri: ing in Washington to be kept in cold storage until the exhibit opens. This | is true especially of peonies for the display of the American Peony Society, which will be heid in conjunction with the American Horticultural soclev.{ ex- hibit and which is expected to bring to Washington the largest number of peonies ever assembled in the United States. Dr. Earle B. White, chairman of the peeony exhibit committee, urges local amateurs who plan to show flowers of this family to cut choice | specimens now in the bud and take| them to the Terminal Refrigerating Co., Fleventh and E streets southwest, where they will be kept in perfect con- dition until the morning of the show. | CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. “Sex Side of Life” will be discussed at the Washington Open Forum, 808 I street northwest, 3 o'clock, by Mrs. Zella W. Newcomb, editor of Troubadour Magazine; Mrs. Emma M. Marsh of the | American Theosophical ~Society and | Miss Adele Smith, registrar of the Washington Workers' School. ‘Mass meeting of the Citizens’ Service Association will be held at Foundry M. E. Church, 3 o'clock. Speakers will include Leo Rover, United States dis- trict attorney; Representative Stalker and Bishop James Cannon, jr., of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. The Chaminade Glee Club will sing. A. A. U. W. invites college women and friends on a walk. Meet at Chain Bridge station (Cabin John car line) at 2:45 o'clock. Hike over towpath as far as the stone shack near Sycamore | Island station. Bring supper. Leaders, the Misses Stone. FUTURE. ! The Kappa Beta Pi Legal Fraternity | will meet for luncheon at the Madrillon | at 12:15 Tuesday. All members in| Washington are invited. The Loyal Knights of the Round Table will meet at_the Unversity Club for luncheon on Tuesday, May 28, at 12:30 pm. Program: Speaker and guest of honor, Dr. John Foote, dean Georgetown Medical School and presi- dent District of Columbia Medical | Society. Subject: “The Oldest Book in | the World.” Pianist: Mrs. Ralph L. Morrison. Lincoln Woman's Relief Corp, No.| 6, will meet tomorrow in G. A. R. Hallg at 8 o'clock. ‘The first annual dance of the Victory Council degree team, National Union Assurance Society, will be held June 5 at Pythian Temple, 1012 Ninth street, from 9 to 12 o’clock. District of Columbia Library As- sociation will hold its annual meeting Tuesday at 8 o'clock in the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge auditorium, Library of Congress. Election of officers. Echoes of the “Conference” musical program. Five hundred crad party for the { benefit of Waneta Council No. 6, De- gree of Pocohantas at Pythian Temple, plea of temporary insanity produced by domestic situation which involved Mrs. arker and the victim. The jury re- aingd out nearly two hours. Tuesday evening, 8:30 o'clock. in room 130, McKinley High School Building. Meeting of the Mid-City Citizens' As- sociation will be held at the Thomson School tamorrow, 8 pm. Capt. H. C. ‘Whitehurst, co-ordinating cer and chief engineer of the District, will pre- sent street-widening plans, particularly Thirteenth street. | graved in subsequent dynasties, but of | | namely, | Book of Mencius was omitted, not being LIBRARY RECEIVES - CHINESE CLASSIGS Former Shantung War Lord Gives Complete Set to Congress Institution. | Chang Tsung-chang, formerly war | lord of Shantung, has presented to the; | Library of Congress through the Ameri- | can Minister at Peking, a complete set lof the Chinese classics in facsimile | script of the ninth century, AD., it ':u announced at the Library yester- ay. The original texts from which this massive printed edition was made were carved on stone in the relgn of the T'ang Emperor K'ai-ch'eng, in 837 AD, and are therefore known as “the h'eng engraved ciassics.” The capital of the empire was then in Sfan, the present capital of Shensi Province, where the stones are still housed in th famous Pei-lin, or “Monument Grove.' The idea of carving the classics on ' stone originated after the burning of the books by the self-styled First Em- peror in the third century B.C. The Five Classics were so engraved in 175 AD. and set up before the gate of the Imperial College. Other sets were en- these only fragments remain. The old- est reasonably complete set engraved on stone today is the one in the “Monu- ment Grove” of Sian. But even this set was greatly mutilated in the great earthquake of 1555, and while “rub- bings” of the original, or of the restored stones, are sometimes obtainable, the ;;‘xt has suffered more or less corrup- on. Used Expert Engravers. For several years past the Shantung war lord, almost without the kriowledge of his own countrymen, has had a corps of skilled wood engravers at work in the great Fa Yuan Ssu Temple in Peking, reproducing the ancient script in wood so as to make the inscribed classics of the T'ang period available not only in cumbersome ‘“rubbings’— in which the characters are white on a black background—but in the| ordinary printed form as well. He was | fortunate to obtain for this purpose | a very rare old “rubbing” that had | been struck off prior to the earthquake of 1555, thus affording not only a com- plete .text of the classics but also a' perfect reproduction of the original | calligraphy of 837 A.D. H Before those calligraphers could com- | mit their writing to_stone, they first had to write the characters with a brush on white paper, which was pasted | to the monument so that the workmn might carve the characters in fac- simile. Now again, after the lapse of 11 centuries, these engravings on wood permit the reproduction of the charac- | ters just as they were first written— | black ideographs on white paper. The text that was carved in 837 com- prised only 12 of the 13 classics; the ! Tegarded then as a part of the canon. It was only after the labors of the great twelfth century commentator, Chu Hsl, that the works of Mencius ob- tained parity with the other classics. In the seventeenth century his works also were engraved on stone in the manner of the T'ang script and placed in the “Monument Grove” beside the | other tablets. This text, of course, is reproduced in Chang Tsung-Chang's great collection. The whole set of the Thirteen Classics as now reprinted comprises 74 vol- National Press Club will hold a re- | ception and entertainment in honor of | the visiting European journalists to- | morrow evening at 8:30 ‘o'clock. Band | orchestra. Motion pictures of Washing- | ton, past, present and future. Members | and male guests. GIRL’S LIQUOR EVID_ENCE- CLOSES RENO RESORTS| Indictments Returned Against 17 Clubs After Activities Cover- ing Three Weeks. By the Associated Press. RENO, Nev., May 25.—With the find- | ing of indictments by the Federal grand \ jury against 17 so-called clubs, all known wet dispensaries here were closed tight today, and the United States marshal and his deputies were busy trying to serve warrants, It all happened through the activities of a dark-haired girl, who for three weeks has been visiting wet resorts in and around Reno. Accompanied by two young men she described as her boy friends, she gained entrance to most of the places where liquor has been flowing freely, agents of Deputy Prohi- bition Director Toombs said. Known as Mrs. Billie Rivers, her real name was Shirley, but she changed it this week by marrying & man ffom Los Angeles, Stanley King. She was the chief witness against those who have been indicted, carrying with her to the Federal Court at Carson City bottles of liquor of all sorts, prop- erly labeled. = S - Canadians Seige U. 8. Ship. | | PRINCE RUPERT, British Columbia, |May 25 (#).—Alleged to have been within Canadian_waters, the American salmon troller Catherine B has been seized by the Canadian patrol boat | Rividis, commanded by Capt. 8heppard, off Rose Point, and brought here. The | American craft carried three men. North Capitgfl Citizens' Association will meet Monday evening at 8 o'clock for every 10 persona Canada now has about 1 .ephunel umes (each 8'; by 13 inches) with 60 large characters to each page—a char- acter being approximately three-fourths of an inch high. Offer Moral Ideas. In a preface that reproduces his own calligraphy, the former Shantung general states that his purpose in re- producing this ancient text was not merely to preserve the beautiful script of an anclent dynasty, but to dissemi- nate, in an age of great political and social confusion, the moral ideas of the classics. Himself a native of the prov. ince in which Confucius was born, he wishes to resive the principles for which Confucius stood. The preface closes with the following quotation from Menclus: “I wish to rectify men’s hearts, put an end to perverse doctrines, resist objectionable behavior, banish lawless expressions, and thus Carry on the work of the sages.” . S DANGER POINT PAST FOR MRS. GENE TUNNEY Ex-Champion Told by Physicians At Brioni, Italy, That Her Condition Is Good. By the Associated Press. BRIONI, Italy, May 25.—Mrs. Gene Tunney was resting comfortably this evening after physicians had declared her out of danger from the relapse suf- fered yesterday. They informed her husband that her condition was good and that her convalescence from the emergency operation for removal of ag abscessed appendix on April 30 was pro- ceeding normally. “No imminent peril” were the words used by the Italian physicians. . The former heavyweight boxing champion had been much disturbed by an increase in temperature of his wife and had hastily summoned physicians from the mainland as well as the sur- geon, Prof. Arthur Wolf Meyer of Ber- lin, who had performed the operation. The surgeon is due here tomorrow DUKE TRUSTEES FLE ARGUNENT Oppose Haskell’s Plea for Review of Suit Asking $24,000,000 Damages. By the Associated Press. The trustees of the estate of the late James B. Duke, tobacco magnate, filed | with the Supreme Court yesterday an |argument in opposition to the review {which George D. Haskell of Massa- | chusetts is seeking of a suit claiming $24,000,000 damages for an alleged breach of contract. Haskell contended an agreement with | Duke for the development of a Ca- | nadian power project in connection with the manufacture of aluminum had been broken and brought suit in the Federal District Court for New Jersey, where he recovered a judgment of $8,000,000, which he contended shuold ;uve been trebled under the anti-trust aws. ‘The Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the case dismissed on the ground that 1929—PART 1. tention that there had been an agree- | ment between Haskell and Duke to en- | gage in the manufacture of aluminum | in competition with the Aluminum Co. of America. Secretary Mellon, as a stockholder in the Aluminum Co., gave a deposition in the case last July, which was discussed recently by the Senate judiclary com- mittee in its investigation into his right to remain as Secretary of the Treasury. | _Counsel for the executors of the Duke estate in opposing a review by the highest court declared that the only question at issue was whether there had been an agreement, as alleged by Haskell, under which Duke contracted |to foin him in competing with the | Aluminum Co. They contended that the finding of the Circuit Court of Ap- peals that there was nw such agreement, was final and left no question open which the highest court would review. MAY 31 LICENSE DATE. Special Dispatch to The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., May 2 Summerfield D. Hall, clerk of the Cir- cult Court of Prince Georges County, has again called attention to the fact that merchants in the county have only until May 31 to renew their trader's license. Only about 75 per cent of the business men of the county have obtained their new licenses, he has reported, pointing out that a penalty of 10 per cent per month is charged against those who do DAVIS QUTLINES ~ [SLAND POLICIES New Governor General % Philippines to Continue | Stimson’s Program. of | By the Associated Press. The continuance of the present pro- gram of building up the economic in- dependence and resources of the Phil- I‘]ppln! Islands and maintenance of | | tween the Filipino leaders and the | American officials were declared yes- | terday by Dwight F. Davis, former Sec- retary of War, to be his principal ob- Jectives in his new post of governor | | general of the islands. utlining the general policles which | he will follow, Mr. Davis declared he would pursue in the main the program | laid down in the administration of his | predecessor, Secretary Stimson. The | new governor general said that through | his past experience as head of the War | Department, and also as Assistant Sec- “close co-operation and teamwork” be- | in having a knowledge of the 1 and duties of his :g‘vl office. i Mr. Davis plans to sail - for the | Philippines - from Seattle about June {15, so that he will reach the islands in time for the opening of the insular legislature. Before leaving Washing- jton about June 1, the new governor general said he contemplated a series of conferences with President Hoover and all the heads of the American Government_ departments to determine his future policies. | "I plan to see each cabinet member." 'he declared, “to secure the best utili- | zation of the facilities of their depart- | ments with the insular government.” | . Mr. Davis expressed the opinion that it was important to develop the eco- nomic independence and resources of ‘\hp islands. together with the stimula- tion of Filipino ownership and opera- tion of insular industries. | _“I hope that a close co-operation be- tween America and Filipino. capital in the islands’ industries can be engen- | dered.” he said | The new governor general said he | would endeavor to promote diversifica- | tion of agriculture and industry in the islands as he viewed this kind of eco- nomic growth as the most permanent and beneficial. | Large Apple Orchard Sold. MARTINSBURG, W. Va, May 25 (Special) —The Potomac Valley Or- chard of 1000 acres in the Haneock section, of which 230 acres is planted to bearing apple trees, has been sold morning. His findings were e; d to go a long way toward reassuring Tunney, who is still on his honeymoon. the evidence failed to sustain the con- | not renew their licenses on time. retary of War, felt he and now we celebrate ito Roblnsonl Brothers, Charles Town, t fortunate ! for 827-829 7th St. N.W. Getting Married Hundreds of Brand_ New DUCED ¥R A" ONE WEPE BPECIAL EVENT! Sui the LIVING e “DINIA ROOM’ SUT KOOM AND every im: gexien—a) us with your furniture problems and we will make it convenient to pay for anything you may need. Prices Like These When You Trade-in Your Old Furniture CASH ALLOWED For Your Old Suite even if it’s Falling to Pieces Shop around wherever you like—com, $139 3-Piece DAVENPORT 63 ur old suite. With mahogany- finish hardwood frames. Seats and backs covered with jacauard velour and 1,125 pricts RECORD BRE AKERS. BIGGEST AND BEST OF ALL THODGA 3 F Al UGl $30 CASH ALLOWANCE we are now offering. It means that you take $30 off the suites for your old worn-out pieces. Prices Like These When Pri Like These Wh You Trade in Your Old One Yl::e'ltrnd‘e ien You:eold 0:: $249 3-Pc. 219 Long Bed l(?-Piece T DINING ROOM = o 1 4 9 SUITE Iall top. Sale price $170. Less $30 for your old suite. = sure that you'll find th. is the SENSATIONAL price of anp of these Prices Like These When You Trade in Your Old One $575 LIVING ROOM SUITES Custom Made e who want the best. Solid mahogany hand-carved = frames. imported frieze mohair coverings, finest Ali- web construction; spring and soft down-filled seat ' cushions. o price $345. Less $30 for yeur old suite. LOW TERMS, too!! Peerless makes payments easy by letting you make terms to suit your convenience 3-Piece OVERSTUFFED SUITE xceptionally = fine surte P geverea "in best woven three-tone velours, all loose re- versible cushions and uaranteed bow-front st Less $30 for peopl| ._enclosed serving table, 6-ft. oblong extension table. semi<enclosed china closet, one arm and five side chairs’ with leather or facquard Sale price $142.00. Less $30 for your old suite. Very Finest BEDROOM SUITES Our_finest #197 n crotch mahogany veneers, 50-inch dresser, your choicé Holly 94 5, French, vanity dresser; Sa 4-Pc. BEDROOM SUITE 40-inch dresser, ot walnut, _Excel- lent construction. Sale price, $398. Less $30 for your old suite. ! and latest style bed {o chgose from Carved Rail, 3-Piece All Mohair LIVING ROOM e SUITES 3-plece be davenport suites, cov- ered with genuine best . Between H and Eye smponua o All finest constructic i $269. 2 color moquette reverse on seat cushions: fine spring con- struction = guaran, throughout. Sale priee 168 for your ol jon and m cushion $30 for