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CLAFLIN Optician—Optometrist 922 14th St. N.W. Established 1889 Loans (D. C. Property Only) 6% No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loan without the expense of renewing. $1,000 for $10 per month, including interest and prin- cipal. Larger or smaller loans at proportionate rates. PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets over $20,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BERRY. President JOSHUA W. CAKR, Seercary You'-v»\./vilivvue'n Vi the ‘delicate smoothhess that Domino Powdered: Sug- ars add to cere~ als and. fruit. | 'Swe ‘afi.iiw th' Domino - Ametican Sugar Refi Look Better—Feel Fine Ask your Barber for a Whyte-Fox M: sage. Whyte-Fox is greatfor Sun Burns, Itch, Poison Ivy. yte-Fox is fine for Head Cold, tal irrita- tions., For Free Boo Lucky Tiger Rem. Co., Kansas City, Mo. WHYTE-FOX THE SKIN' rect LANONT APPONS 1B CENSLS ADES | Executive Committee Named to Help in Unemploy- ment Survey. members was appointed today by Sec- retary Lamont to aid the Department {of Commerce in formulating plans for the census of unemployment to be tak- en next year. The committee consists“f Dr. Joseph H. Willetts of the University cf Penn- sylvania, Philadelphia; William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, Washington; J. Chester Bow- en of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, { Washington; William M. Berridge of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York; George E. Roberts, vice president of the National City Bank, New York; L. W. Wallace of the American Fed- | erated Engineering Societies, Washing- | ton, and Dr. E. Dana Durand of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com- merce, Washington. At the same time Secretary Lamont announced a conference at the Com- merce Department next Thursday, to which he has invited a number of manufacturers, economists and statis- ticians to discuss the census of manu- facturers, which also will be taken next year along with the regular decennial census of population, Among those the Secretary has in- vited to aid the Commerce Department in planning for the manufacturers’ census are: Dr. Walter S. Tower, P Dr. Alonzo E. Taylor California; New ; John W. Arthur Williams, | ington; Clarence M. Wooley, New York: E. N. Wentworth, Chicago: John S. Lawrence, Boston; Dr. Edmund E. Day, New York; Chrisile Benet, Columbia, S. A. M. Dixon, Gastonia, N. C.; nard, Indivnapolis; J | ton, New York; Dr. New York, and George Gordon Craw- ford, Birmingham. FEAST DAY OBSERVED BY CATHOLIC CHURCH Charity Work Is Considered at Meeting of St. Vincent De Paul Members. Members of the St. Vincent de Paul Soclety, composed of charity conferences in all the Catholic parishes of the city and vicinity, commemorated the feast day of their patron saint yesterday with a mass and a meeting at which the charity work of the organization was_considered. Although the feast day occurred last Friday the commemoration was post- poned to enable an attendance of mem- bers from 46 parishes at the mass, which was held at 8 o'clock in the morning in St. Patrick’s Church. The celebrant was Rev. Father Sheehan, as- sistant director of the Bureau of Catholic Charities, who in his sermon gave a resume of St. Vincent de Paul in organizing the greatest of all Catholic charity societies in the world. Following the services at the church breakfast was served in the Knights of Columbus Hall, followed by a meeting at which reports- of the various con- ferences were made by the presidents. ‘The meeting was in charge of George O'Leary, president of Particular Coun- cil, with Maurice F, Moore as secre- tary. The various reports. indicated the vast amount of charity work con- ducted by laymen of the church, with no_salaries attached to it. This was particularly noticeable in the work con- ducted in the jails and reformatories. The principal address was by W. J. Philp, newly appointed Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, who was formerly postmaster at Dallas, Tex. He urged the council to fill its ranks with young men. Remarks also were made by John McCarron, the archdiocesan pres- ident of the Holy Name Society; Father Sheehan, Judge William H. De Lacy and John Hadley Doyle. BOY IS MISSING. An executive committee of seven| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JULY 22, 1929. JONES BANKRUPTCY CASE DEFERRED UNTIL OCTOBER No Action on Petition of Woolen Mills Corpotration Taken in Virginia Court. % WINCHESTER, Va. July 22—Action |on a petition filed by several minor Baltimore creditors of the Arthur G. Jones Woolen Mills Corporation, this city, to have the concern adjudged bankrupt, has been deferred until Oc- tober 28 by Judge Henry Clay McDowell of the United States Court for the | | | | : in America Rich NEW PACK JUNE Tona Lima Beans Sultana Kidney Beans Quaker Maid Beans. .3 New String Beans. . .3 EST%HED '8 O’Clock Tall Cans Western District of Virginia, it was|’ ‘The was pre- | mi learned today. petition sented to Judge McDowell, it was said, by a firm of Baltimore lawyers, who immediate action, but the court declined to consider the application until late in October. As a result of this action a call for a meeting of all preferred stockholders of the corporation, ani was canceled tod: 3 's action would give stockholders ample opportunity for making further plans for the future of the company, whose financial affairs have become much tangled in recent months, resulting in many indictments on em| lement and conspiracy charges having been returned Arthur G. Jones, for- ) AN treas- HOLD-UP CONFESSION CLEARS PRISONER Illinoisan, Identified by Bank President, Had Served Eight Months of Sentence. residen SHI? REACHES PORTUGAL. LISBON, Portugal, July 22 ().—The Polish warship Iskra, carrying Ma). Casimir Kubala and the body of his transatlantic companion, Maj. Ludwik Idzikowski, arrived at Ponta Del,-rl, San Miguel, today on its voyage from the Azores to the flyer's homeland. The ship's flag was at half mast as were the flags of the escorting Polish cruisers Sagres and Zaire. By the Assoclated Press. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 22.—Con- fession of Gilbert Ammerman, 29, local | taxi driver, that he participated in the | $4,000 holdup August 20, 1928, of the | His confession followed tinued - Exchange State Bank at Golden, Iil, | tioning and he was re!ufw’l:a ':!m?x‘:;l'm has exonerated Everitt Howell of Quincy, — s, (erved it mdnthe VEhe | nstaxica line tn S Batvhdor'ts inot eni nviction O advertising that it uses French cars ex- of a part in the robbery. clusively. GINGER. “Identified” by the bank president as TIGER A%, one of the bandits H to NONE BETTER A. G. HERRMANN ' 750 Tenth St. Southeast Phone Lincoln 1981-1982 lowell was sentenced . John Barnhill, 35, of , Ill, arrested with him, and also convicted and sentenced, has been | at liberty on an appeal bond. | In a search for the third membér nli the gang police last Thursday arrested | ! Peter McDonald, 19, of Chicago. He | was said to have confessed the holdup, | | but declared he had never seen Howell. On McDonald’s information police ar- rested Ammerman here Saturday night. | QUALITY-SERVICE LOW PRICES Have made the “A&P” the daily shopping place for over two and a half million housewives. come to know that one sure way to receive just what They have is wanted every time is to purchase all of their food needs at COFFEE. The Largest Selling Coffee and Creamy 25¢ | FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES Peas c= 10c FANCY ICEBERG .can, 10c cans, 25¢ cans 32¢ String Beans their nearest A. & P. Store. Chilled—It’s Delicious VAN CAMP’S TOMATO SOUP A pleasing and tempting way to serve Tomato Soup these hot Summer days is to prepare it in the regular way —as though you were planning to have it hot— but instead place it in the refrigerator until it is well chilled. Tt is delicious —try it some day soon and give the family a surprising treat. TENDER GREEN LETTUCE Del Monte , TOMATO SAUCE ENCORE | 'MACARONI SPAGHETTI and NOODLES 4 »s 25¢ CRUSHED SUGAR Corn c= 10c Shredded Wheat. . . . .pkg., 10c Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, 3 Pk&* 25¢ Kellogg’s Rice Krispies 2 P*¢* 25¢ Heinz Rice Flakes. .2 pkgs., 25¢ Del Monte Spinach Dromedary Grapefruit. .can 25¢ . 10c Head 10C Puffed Rice. Puffed Wheat ..+ pkgeilSec 2 pkgs., 25¢ New Sweet Potatoes. .....:.cx.s5.-. . 3 Ibs., 22¢ -.4 ears, 25¢ Ripe Cantaloupes.........each, 15¢ Juicy Lemons. ..... ... .doz., 39¢ June Apples. ... . 4 Ibs., 25¢ Police Asked About Charlottes- ville Lad Gone From Home. Dabney M. Trice, 15 years old, is re- ported missing frorh nis home in Char- lottesville, Va., the past five days and local police have been asked to make an effort to locate him. The missing boy has *dark brown hair and brown eyes, When he left home he wore gray trous- ers and a dark sweater, but no hat. Police were asked to make inquiries at recruiting stations, suggesting the prob- ability of the boy having expressed an intention of enlisting in the Army or Navy. The police were requested to communicate with Claude R. Yardley, 218 Fifth street northeast, Charlottes- \‘;gle. should they find any trace of the Y. ENCORE PREPARED Spaghetti 3 o 25¢ Gold Medal Salad Dressing Gelfand’s Mayonnaise Gulden’s Mustard . jar, 13¢ Quaker Maid Ketchup. . .-... . 8-0z. bottle, 10c Bread and Butter Pickles. ............ j Pin-Money Mixed Pickles. . ............. jar, 27¢c Royal Gelatine, fruit flavored . . . .2 pkgs., 15¢ -WILDMERE BRAND Fresh EGG Sunnyfield Print Butter. . ... Fancy Creamery Butter, cut from the tub, |b., 50c Pure Lard. . ... .tub, Ib., 14¢; pkg., Ib., 15¢ 1-Ib. tin, 23c.; 125-Ib. tin, 35¢ Nutley, Nut Margarine . .Ib., 23c Nucoa, Nut Margarine ..... cam:evecmx-e-. Ibey 25¢ Eagle Condensed Milk .....cxw.z. exror. €an, 19¢ Carton of 12 44c . .12-0z. jar, 18c 8-0z. jar, 25c + “Staina just rub away with Old Wilch!™ THREE MINCTES TIWE AND NEN CLEASER SINES S8 UG Local woman cleans valuable rug thought to be ruined e ’ 7o pzeT Hunt 55-Year-01d Heiress. FAIRFIELD, Calif., July 22 (#).— Search for Miss Irene Wolfskill, 55- year-old heiress, who disappeared July 14, centered yesterday in a ravine on the Wolfskill ranch, half a hundred men participating. LOIN or RIB Pork Roast1s:35¢ - Fresh Ground Hamburg. .. .. .....Ib., 30c Veal Paddies.................lb, 35¢c Select Veal Cutlets. ... . .car. . . . . 1., 65¢ End Cut Pork Chops. . . ... ....... . .1b.,, 35¢ ‘ Select Pork Chops. ...........lb, 42¢ Breast of Lamb, for stewing. . . . .Ib., 20c Rath’s Spiced Ham..........%:-lb., 18¢c Rath’s Cooked Loin. . ... ..... . . %-Ib., 18¢c Sliced Cooked Ham. . . .. .... %-1b., 20c el GOLD MEDAL KITCHEN TESTED FLOUR 5-Ib. Bag 12-1b. Bag 24-1b. Bag. 30c | 65¢c |*1* edical Glasses Pitted College Eyes Examined DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist '.hnllt National 0721 409-410 Mo 3 Toth and & Bis. N Good-Bye Itching Skin when invisible Zemo is applied Soothing, healing and tremendously efficient, invisible Zemo brings quick relief when bites, rash, sunburn, and other Summer afflictions cause itch- ing and discombort. It cools and soothes. It draws out local infection. It smooths away blemishes and clears up the skin. Keep clean, antiseptic Zemo always on hand. Use it freely. It is safe, pleasant. 35c, 60 and $1.00. wife. Ask our Manager to show you how it works. What a pity! That beautiful rug covered with coffee stain. Too bad, they said, you'll never get it out. Yet today, the rug is just as good asnew. How do yousuppose she did it? Why, she just poured a little “Old Witch" intoa basin of hot water. Then with a damp, clean cloth she rubbed the stain away. It's simply marvelous the way “Old Witch” takes out spots . . . makes things bright as new . . . without the slightest bit of hard work. What it is — What it does “0Old Witch” is the new ammonia discovery. A super-cleanser in fluid form, 3 times as efficient as ordinary household ammonia. Different from any cleanser you've ever used before. It saponifies grease. Softens water. Instantly removes all clinging particles of grime. Dirt just seems to lift right off, the minute “Old Witch” gets into action. You just pour a little into a basin + + » add water and soap . . . when there's any cleaning job to do. Note particularly the way_ “Old ‘Witch”” saves your hands . . . how it keeps them smooth and soft . . . never rough and coarse-looking. So be sure to get the genuine “Old ‘Witch” ammoniated cleanser . . . re- ‘member ““0ld Witch” is what you ask for. Tell your grocer nothing else will " do. ized bottle costs only 35¢. + Why not ’phone the grocer now ‘while the subject’s on your mind? Old Witch ‘THE NEWAMMONIADISCOVERY, ], ‘l; A great help to every house- 7 /‘l s Mty a1 P&G Soap. . . ......6 cakes, 25¢ Selox, Speed Soap . . . . pkg., 15¢ Babbitt’s Lye. . . .. .. .can, 12¢c Ige. pkg., 25¢ Palmolive Soap . . . . 2 cakes, 15¢ Lifebuoy Soap. . .-.3 cakes, 20c .Ib., 52¢ .Ib., 45¢ Nectar Tea Balls, pkg. of 15, 18¢c Nectar Tea. . .- %-Ib. pkg., 15¢ C&C Ginger Ale. .2 bottles, 25¢ Pure Grape Juice pint, 25¢ SUNNYFIELD SLICED Bacon % »s. 20c Pound, 39¢ [ ~ion O [PENNSYLVANIA] ¢ PERMIT 32 oIlL Motor Oil assures you of i supreme performance—more miles of safe lubrication per fill! To fully appreciate Autocrat Motor Oil quality, however, P" should use it straight— ave your crank case drained, and refilled with clean, new Autocrat. Nothing is more important than thorough lubrication. Beware of Substitutes. Bayerson Oil Works Columbia 5228 OLD WITCH AMMONIATED CLEANSER A specially treated ex- 1 5 c 12-0z. Bottle A CO. tra strength ammonia CANADA DRY The Cham, of Ce}inger Klaegsne 18c GREAT ATLANT I1C Bottle that will not irritate or roughen the hands. R