Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1929, Page 18

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Y Lol MANY COMMITTEE CHANGES FORECAST: Senator Capper Chosen in Edge’s Place in Impor- tant G. 0. P. Post. PARTICIPANTS An extensive revision of the commll-' tees of the Senate, involving important shifts which in some instances will| change the attitude of leading commit- tees on momentous issues before Con- gress, is planned early in the regular | session. This became known here yesterday co- | incident with an announcement that Senator Jones. acting Republican leader, had selected Senator Capper of Kansas as the successor to Senator Edge of New Jersey, just appointed Ambassador to Paris, on the Republican committee on committees. Senator Jones said the resignation of Senator Edge and the death of Senator Burton of Ohio had created a vacancy on the committee on committees as well as on a number of Senate committees. He said the new Senators succeeding Senators Edge and | Burton should have their assignments as soon as possible and he assumed the committee on committees would meet to make assignments in the vacation i:- tween now and December 2. IN Senator McNary of Oregon, chairman of the committee on committees, who may later be the Republican leader nl} the Senate. indicated, however, that | the committee on committees would undertake to fill not only these vacancies | but would enter on a revision of the make-up of the committees on a gen- eral scale.. While Senator McNary did | not say so, it is apparent that this| may affect a number of matters of | legislation and policy in the regular| session. Questionnaire to Be Sent. Senator McNary this week will send | letter to all Republican Senators ask- ing them whether they are satisfled with their present committee assign- ments. These replies will be analyzed ; and then Senator McNary will call the committee on committees together to consider them. McNary does not expect this will be possible until a week or perhaps more after the regular session opens. By the time the committee on committees meets it is probable the Senate will have disposed of the Vare case, ex- cluded Vare and a new Senator will be on hand from Pennsylvania. Thus there will be three new Senators to be taken care of, instead of two, as Jones pointed out. In addition, the committes will have on its hands the problem of making a large number of shifts from the present committee arrangement. Inasmuch as it is expected Senators will insist cn keeping the places they have in about 75 per cent of the cases, it is expected the prospective changes in the personnel of committees will not amount to a complete shake-up of the committees. However, it will involve enough changes so that the line-up of committees cn the problems before them will be altered and may be completely reversed in some instances. One of the foremost propositions in- volved is the line-up of the foreign re- lations committee. Another is the line- up of the finance committee, with tariff impending and tax revison coming on. The commerce committee, with the Hoover costruction and waterway pro- gram talked of, is also in demand and its personnel is important, as is also agriculture and interstate commerce. Friendliness Is Desired. President Hoover, according to gcssip which went the rounds of the Capitcl vesterday, is anxious to have the foreign relations committee friendly to adminis- | tration foreign policies. It is said th» administration would like to have men on this committee who are disposed to accept what comes out of the London naval conference, the Root world court formula and other propositions in re- spect to foreign relations which the administration supports. Jones is men- tioned as a Senator whom the adminis- tration would be glad to see on foreign relations. It is not expected, however, that Jcnes will desire to give up the chairmanship of commerce or his place as a leading Republican member of | appropriations. A number of Senators aspire to the foreign relations committee. Senator . Robinson of Indiana is one of them. A sharp fight over places on this commit- tee is sure to result. Already there is a brewing battle over the finance committee. The insurgents are complaining of no representation on that body. They want Senator La Fol- | Com lette put on. Regulars of the old guard and “Young Turks" are opposed to La Follette. Robinson of Indiana would | also like a place on finance. and Stnl»[ tor Thomas of Idaho likewise. Both of these Senators are of the “Young Turk’ |ty Center Council; next month. Lower: Doris Stevens, New York, and Mrs. Pell is the daughter of Col. Robert THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, NOVEMBER 24, 1929—PART ONE. ONE OBSCENE BOOK PREVENTS ENTRY OF ALL INBOX, U.S. RULES PARLEY HERE A group from the National Woman’s Party, which meets in the Capital Upper: Mrs. Frances Roberts and Mrs. Stephen Pell of New York. Mrs. Richard Wainwright, Washington. Thompson of Washington. COMMUNITY TREE LIGHTING PLANNED Special Arrangements Ex-| pected to Be Made for Christmas Event. Special arrangements are expected to be made this Christmas for lighting the community Christmas tree in Sherman Square, just south of the Treasury De- partment, near the White House. Lieut. Col. U. 8. Grant, 3d, director of public bulldings and public parks of the Na- tional Capital, proposes to confer in a few days with a special committee from the community organizations which have been studying this subject. A new community Christmas tree was planted earlier in the year in Sherman Square, the previous tree having died. ‘The demise of the old tree was attributed to the weight of the electrical illumina- tion and the heat from the bulbs. The new arrangement for lighting the tree | this year contemplates avoiding this| difficulty. Wilbur Heads Committee, Secretary of the Interior Wilbur has accepted the position of chairman of the national committee, whi will sponsor the annual Yuletide ceremonies at the tree. ‘The committee on organization, which includes Col. Grant, E. C. Graham, Ovid M. Butler, executive secretary of the American Forestry Association; L. T. Day of the Electric League of Wash- ington and Miss Sibyl Baker, director | of the community center department of the District of Columbia, has sent invitations to representatives of out- standing national organizations and a group of officials to become members of the national committee for 1929. Invitations have gone to Senator Capper and Representative Zihiman, chairmen of the District committees; Charles F. Carusi, president of the Board of Education of the District of Columbia; Prderic A. Delano, chairman of the National Park and Planning mission; Proctor L. Dougherty, pres- ident of the board of Commissioners o the District of Columbia; W. W. Free- | man, president of the Soclety for Elec- | trical Development, New York City: E. C. Graham, chairman of the Communi- Mrs. Willlam H. | FIVE ARE ELEVATED Pope Pius Honors Ireland by Naming Archbishop Mac- Rory as Primate. By the Associated Press VATICAN CITY, November 23 —An- nouncement was made today in Osser- vatore Romano of the nomination of | five new cardinals, bringing the sacred | college membership to 62, of whom !.‘!I are non-Italians of whom the .most three non-Italians of whom the most Rev. Joseph MacRory, Archbishop of Armagh, was one. The others appointed were Mgr. Cerejeira, patriarch of Lisbon; Arch- bishop Verdier of Paris, Archbishop Lavitrano of Palermo and Archbishop Minoretti of Genoa. ' | Elevation Honors Ireland. ‘The naming of Archbishops Cerejeira, MacRory and Verdier had been under- stood tacitly for a number of days. Archbishop Lavitrano's elevation had been expected for some time, but the nomination of Archbishop Minoretti | came as a surprise, althoygh there is precedent for the Archbishop of Genoa having the Cardinal's rank. Pope Pius has let it be known that by elevating Archbishop MacRory, he wished to show his affection for Ire- land, “the mother of saints” in the person of the incumbent of her his- toric archdiocese, Armagh, whose pos- :esl;on makes him the primate of Ire- | and. It is understood that Archbishop Verdier will come to Rome to receive the red hat from the Pope's hands at & public consistory, December 19, in- stead of having it imposed by President Doumergue indirectly through another French cardinal.” Dubois Invested Cerretti. When Cardinal Cerretti, who was then nuncio at Paris, was elevated in 1925, the stage seemed set for the president of the republic to resume the historic custom of bestowing the red hat sent from Rome, but it was re- called that President Doumergue was the first protestant French chief of state since King Henry 1V. The diffi- | culty was solved by President Doumer- Rue receiving the red hat from the | Pope's special emissary and handing it WOMEN'S PARTY | | 70 PLAN ACTION Biennial Convention Next Month to Draw Many Prominent Delegates. Plans for national and international work in behalf of equal rights for women will be considered at the blennial convention of the National Woman's party, which will be held in this ecity December 6 to 9, in the garden house of the Dodge Hotel and at the newly acquired headquarters of the party, 144 B street northeast. Prominent women from all parts of the country are expected to attend. Features of the convention will be a reception at the new headquarters, known as the Alva Belmont House, in honor of Mrs. O. P. Belmont, national president of the organization; an “international dinner” in the ball- room of the Willard Hotel, and a me- morial meeting in honor of Mrs. Emme- line Pankhurst, British feminist, in the Capitol. The business sessions of the conven- tion on the afternoon of Friday, De- cember 6, and the morning and after- noon of December 7, will be held in the garden house of Dodge Hotel. The reception will be on the evening of De- cember 6 by the District of Columbia branch of the party. It also will be in the nature of a hoysewarming, since | the use of the new headquarters. To Preside Friday. Mrs. Jene Norman Smith of New York, chairman of the national coun- cil of the Woman's party, will preside at the first session on Friday afternoon, at which national work is to be the subject under consideration. The prin- cipal national undertaking of the Woman's party is the equal rights amendment providing that men and women shall have equal rights in the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction. ! Miss Maud Younger of San Francisco, congressional chairman of the Woman's party, will report at this session on the work being done in Congress for the amendment. Chairmen of the State branches of the party will report on the work being done in their States. The sessions Saturday morning and afternoon will deal with international work for equal rights. Miss Doris Ste- vens, chairman of the committee on international action, will present her | report dealing with the prcposed equal | rights treaty. The newly acquired heafquarters here was formerly the residence of Senator Porter Dale of Vermont and is one of the oldest houses in Washington. Mrs. Emile Berliner, chairman of the District branch, will head the receiving line on the night of the reception. To Preside at Dinner. Inez Haynes Irwin, chairman of the Authors’ Council of the Women's Party, will preside at the dinner at the ‘Willard Saturday evening, December 7, when the report of the decisions made by the convention regarding international work will be made. The speakers at the din- ner will be Ambassador Ferrara of Cuba, Senator Capper of Kansas, Doris Stevens, Olive Stott Gabriel of New York, presi- dent of the National Assoclation of ‘Woman Lawyers; Mille. Fanny Bunand- Sevastos of Paris, Jane Norman Smith of New York, Gail Laughlin of Portland. Me., and Mrs, Willlam Kent of San Prancisco. The memorial to Mrs. Pankhurst will be held in the Capitol on Sunday after- noon, December 8. Miss Christabel Pankhurst, who was her mother's chief aide in the British militant campaign, will attend the service. The Marine Band Orchestra will play and a quartet, under the direction of Ruby Smith Stahl, will sing. The so-called militant flag of purple, green and white, which has been sent. from London, will lead rocession of ‘Woman’s Party bann carried by members of the Young Women's Coun- cil of the Women's Party. The banner, it is explained, led many a demonstra- tion of the English militants in the days when they were fighting for suffrage. Mrs. William Kent will preside and Mrs. Edith Houghton Hooker of Balti- more will make the speech of tribute to Mrs. Pankhurst. A representative of the British embassy, it is announced, will attend the ceremony. Mrs. Matie Moore Forrest, pageant director, is chairman of the committee in charge of the memorial service. The concluding event of the conven- tion will be the visit of a delegation to President Hoover at noon on Monday. 'WEATHER HINDERS it will be the first public occasion of | element, which is sure to demand con- | Hoffman, president of the Girl Scouts | sideration in the prospective shifting of | of America; Joseph Lee, president of | committee positions. Senator Steiwer the Playground and Recreation Asso- of Oregon is another one of the “Young | ciation of America; Mrs. William Lock- to the late Cardinal Dubois, who was then Archbishop of Paris. Cardinal Dubois thereupon invested Cardin&l Cerretti with it. RELIEF WORKERS Turks” who is mentioned for a finante | committee place. | Bad Effects Possible. 1t is cjear that any disposition of the finance committee which leaves the in- surgents without representation on that committee will leave soreness and dis- satisfaction. Western members, not only insurgent but otherwise, have frequently complained that the finance committee is completely dominated by Eastern Senators. On the other hand, in view of the insurgent-Democratic coalition in | the Senate, regular Republicans fear that the finance col ttee may get into control of this coalition. Not only foreign relations, finance, agriculture, commerce and interstate commerce, but all other committees which have important legislative mat- | ters ahead of them are going to be con- | cerned in the partial shake-up which stands ahead. The fact the insurgents and “Young Turks,” as well as the old guard, each one of these blocs, seeks to | improve their position in the Senate| has to be taken into account in con- sidering the possible effects. EMPIRE TRADE STUDY PRESSED IN BRITAIN| Conservative Party Will Make Issue Leading Ome in Its Program. By the Associated Press. LONDON, November 23.—The Con- servative party is preparing to place | empire trade in the forefront of its Em?rlm. The inquiry into the matter, | dicated by former Premier Stanley Baldwin, Thursday, is to be “thorough and systematical.” | The political correspondent of the Daily Telegraph says “the Conserva- tives hope to frame a policy in detail which will avoid the s theories of 20 years ago and will take full account of modern conditions.” - “Mr. Baldwin, it is to be observed, the Telegraph comments, editorially, “did not closely define his policy. He spake, indeed, as if it had to be worked out entirely anew and we understand the Conservative chiefs are about to undertake a new survey of the imperial field which shall embrace not only the dominions and India, but also the crawn colonies and protectorates in the “light of present conditions, “We understand that the inquiry will start with the basic assumption that food taxes are ruled out.” The Times editorially regards the Baldwin spesch as “the opening of a new cam) which the cpposition party, with differences laid aside and ith the first confusion of defeat {ebmedied, now prepares to wage.” wood, president of the Garden Club of America; Mrs. Elmer J. Ottaway, Na- Federation of Music Clubs; Geo D. Pratt, president of the American Forestry Association; Miss E. Ruth Pyrtle, president of the National Education Association; Mrs. John F. Slrpel. president of the General Feder- ation of Women's Clubs: Maj. R. Y. Stuart, chief of the Forestry Service of the United States; James E. West, chief | Scout exccutive of the Boy Scouts of | America, and Representative F. Zihlman. In Charge of Ceremonies. Miss Sibyl Baker, director of the Community Center degnrtmem. has ac- cepted the chairmanship of the execu- tive committee for the ceremonies around the tree on Christmas eve. It has been the custom for a number of years for the community center de- partment of the city to have charge of the details of the program. CAPITAL MAN JAILED FOR THEFT IN VIRGINIA C. E. King Sentenced to 15 Months on Charge of Stealing Mill Equipment. Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., November 23— C. E. King of N street northwest, Wash- ington, D. C., was sentenced to a 15- month penitentiary term on a charge of grand larceny in Circuit Court at Harrisonburg, Va., by Judge H. W. Bertram. King pleaded guilty to the | theft of belting, screens and other flour milling equipment from the F. S. Shank Co., Timberville, last September, to the value of $400. Kink had been operating the Shank | mill under lease for the past year. Part | of the loot was recovered at King's home in Washington, and the remain- der in Batlimore, where he had sold it. Mgr. Verdier, it appears, will not be consecrated archbishop of Paris until :i{"rl he has already been made a car- nal. MacRory Is Congratulated. DUBLIN, Irish Free State, November | 23 ().—Archbishop MacRory tonight | was already receiving many telegrams | and congratulations on his forthcom- ing elevation to the cardinalate, re- sponsible quarters here regarded as offi- clal the' announcement in the Osserva- tore Romano today. AUSTREKN OFFICIALS PROPOSE HIGHER TARIFF New Government Seeks Revenue Measure and Protection for Home Products. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 23.—An up- ward tariff revision, to provide new revenue and stimulate markets for home products, has been proposed by the new government which took office in Australia on October 22, Herbert commissioner-general for in the United States, an- nounced today. Tariffs will be increased in some cases, the announcement said. The new schedule to be introduced covers 221 items and sub-items of the customs tariff and 18 items in the excise tariff. “In the amended dutiés,” the atate- ment said, “special attention has been paid to agricultural products, groceries and textiles, Including such factures thereof, including wireless ap- liances.” Increased duties will be imposed on leather and rubber manufactures, and amended duties will be provided on dressed timber, and manufactures of wood and furniture, in the new King gave no reason for his act. schedule. Cork Came Out, and Strong and forbidden odors pervaded the air of the United States branch of Police _Court, presided over by Judge Isaac R. Hitt, yesterday morning. The magistrate sniffed the air. did Policeman Leo Murray. It was the trained nose of the latter that located the source of the smell. In a chair directly in front of the judge’s bench a little pool of liquid had collected. Murray examined it. With- out question it was whisky, for the ;’d h on the chair was beginning to ade. Policeman Migray decided to walt on Telltale Chair In Police Court Waits to Trap Culprit the turn of events. In a few minutes an attorney came in. He sat down in the chair, but did not remai Policeman Murray said nothing. “Why bother, the man who left the liquor there must know it, and certainly the culprit wouldn't sit in his own liquor.” Murray was watching for a man to avold chair, not sit in it. Perhaps he Is still waiting. ‘At any 1;.;.-, the chair is still there, though ading. An:, ‘while on the subject of the chalr, it is cne of those reserved for ’ember- of the local bar, ines as woolen plece goods, apparel, hats, caps, | socks, stockings and metals, and manu- | | Riot Call Brings Police. | High Winds Hamper Rehabilita- tion of Burin Peninsuls, Hit by Tidal Wave. By the Associated Press. ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland, Novem- ber 23.— Reports from the disaster- stricken area of the Burin Peninsu) where a tidal wave last Monday took a toll of at least 32 lives and probably more, today indicated that bad weather, high winds and running seas were ham- pering relief and repair work. Supplies were being forwarded to the communities that suffered greatly by the damaging wall of water. Barring accidents, it was expected the total re- lief supplies would suffice to care for the in:lbilunu for a week, by which time it was hoped conditions would be near normal again. ‘Temporary housing quarters were be- ing erected for the injured at Burin. The relief ship Meigle proceeded along the cost to ascertain conditions and take aboard any injured persons. Tele- graphic communications between Burin and this place was still broken, and contact was being made by means of motor boats from Epworth, 2 miles away. Audi;we';t—(—)pera Storms Box Office After Waiting Hour Unpaid Cast Refuses To Go on Stage. | By the Associated Py BOSTON, November 23.—An audi- ence of 1,500 persons who had waited vainly an hour for the initial curtain to rise on “Alda,” being given by the Cosmopolitan Opera Ccmp‘n{l at the Arlington Theater here tonight, made a wild for the box when a man in the lery shouted: “If this performance isn't going on, we want our mone t cast wanted their he ted. | money too, so they had refused to go on_the stage. The crowd milled around the ticket office in the foyer, demanding their money back. The announcement by one of the management that the re- fund would not be forthcoming until Monday was answered in the form of a brick which shattered one of the box office windows. Instantly the crowd broke the remaining glass. A riot call brought a force of pa- trolmen who dispersed the erowd. PARLEYS T0 BEGIN ON CONSERVATION 11 States concerned was presented by its commissioner. Scope of Work Suggested. President Hoover told' the commis- sion to study the whole ‘question of the public domain, particularly those phases having to do with the unreserved lands. Federal Official Is Innocent Victim of Law “as Higher Mathematics Treatise Is Barred by “Contamination.“ | BY WILLIAM HARD | Now it seems that under the laws of the United States, an obzcene book | can, by its mere physical presence in a box or crate or package, contaminate | and outlaw an otherwise pure book contained therein. A Federal official re- | cently was the innocent victim, through whom this astonishing fact was revealed. ‘The_official in question is employed in one of the departments in Wash- He outlined three outstanding questions on which he asked the commission to obtain information. First of the problems concerned over- grazihg on the unreserved lands. The Chief Executive pointed out that value of ranges have diminished as much as | 80 per cent in some localities, and that | destruction of natural cover is a major disaster, imperiling water supply. The second problem was to determine By the Associated Press. the best method of applying a recla- The Commission on Conservation and | mation service to the West in order to Administration of the Public Domain, |88in real and enlarged conservation, Commission Meets in Prep-1 aration for Study of National Problems. ington. A book dealing with the higher regions to find out whether Einstein is right or wrong. He has a leisure-time passion for mathematics. of mathematics. He more or less likes ‘The book he tried to import was a book through which he hoped to be able to accomplish such or similar researches. To his infinite su not, long ago receive in the Treasury Department a com- munication to the following general, but also exact, effect: “A book on mathematics has arrived in the custom house assigned to you. This book, however, is in the same package with some coples of poems en- titled ‘The Metamorphoses,’ written by the ancient Roman poet, Ovid. These poems bave been declored by the cus- toms authorities to be obscene. Your book has arrived in their company, packed into the same box with them. Accordingly your book cannot be de- livered to you. Very sorr: An examination of the law shows that the Treasury Department was justified. ‘The only improvement in the law that could be suggested now would be rise he one day from an official Telephone & Telegraph Co. and nu- merous others of similar standing came to the White House and went away quietly and peaceably, with their mouths shut, leaving all communica- tions with the press to the President. Mr. Ford arrived with his publicity agent and grabbed off the whole scenery and the whole step-up of the White House surroundings, where he was a guest, for two personal communications of his own to the newspapers of the world, giving forth his own individual views and his own individual intentions regarding the industrial situation. Remonstrances were addressed to him. It was pointed out to him, for instance, that his announcement of his intention to raise wages in his plants He ordered from Europe | | would be an unfortunate and unde- | ; served reflection upon his less fortunate business fellow guests who might not | have, as he has, $300,000,000 in the | . ‘The remonstrances were in vain. | | Mr. Ford saw the light, calcium light, | | and followed it and took it. The other "flelt industrialists departed from the | White House ejaculating, “That's | Henry.” that the whole of any ship bringing over obscene book should be de- tained at a virtuous American port and padlocked for a year. * O ow W It will be 2 long time before the great industrialists of this country will again be h-gpy in accepting an invi- tation to a business conference at the White House, if they know that Henry Ford is to be one of the party. Last (Copyright, 1 appointed by President Hoover to for- mulate a policy for possible turning over of surface rights to Government lands to the States within which they lie, organized at its first meeting yes- terday and recessed until tomorrow. James R. Garfleld, chairman of the | commission, announced that tomorrow he would present an estimated budget |as & basis for congressional appropria- tion and would assign committees to study the various phases of the problem. Building Question Discussed. A suggestion that the Federal Gov- emment finance the building of dams and the States take over the further reclamation development was discussed by the commission. E. C. Van Patten, commissioner from Oregon, contended that giving the public lands to the States would require a new reclamation act in that the Federal Government would not have authority to construct reclamation projects on State property. One of the commissioners, R. . Tiffany of Olympia, Wash, reported that he had resigned as State hydraulic engineer of his State and came to o Y the Governor of Washington, The questions into which the com- mission will inquire were outlined by President Hoover at the White House, and by Secretary Wilbur and Chair- Wednesday Owen D. Young of the General Electric Co. and Myron Taylor of the United States Steel Corporation and Walter Gifford of the Ameri Mexico expects to complete next year | a through railway from Mexico City to | the United States border. Poster Bed iny™s: A True Bargain ] 50 3-Pc. Bed-Da In two-tone jacquard ve- lour—a living room suite and bedroom suite combined—club chair, wing chair or bunny chair completes the suite. sign — all Smoker Stands A True Bergain $ 2’.98 Double skelves — glass ash tray. Occasional Tables A True Bargain designs ... Two-in-One Tables A True Bargain 75 In walnut combined with grill door china cabinet.... A True Bargain Magazine Stands A True Bargain In walnut finish, also decorated s .99 in Green and Red 905.907 7th Street lected cabinet woods. 66-in. buf- fet, chairs upholstered in velour, man Garfield at the committee’s tempo- rary headquarters in the Interior De- partment. An individual picture of the B 1 | A third study would be to consider ! the question of conservation of oil, coal and other problems that arise in con- nection with the public domain. Chair- Garfield estimated the work of the commission would be completed by Mid- | winter., 'HOME OF MRS. PITNEY IS REPORTED ENTERED Police Say Loss Will Not Be Known Until Return to City of For- mer Justice's Widow. | A report that the home of Mrs. | Mahlon Pitney, widow of the former | associate justice of the Supreme Court, [at 1763 R street had been broken into sometime in the last two months was made to police yesterday by Caroline Kellner, said to be an employe of Mrs. | Pitney. | ""Police said she reported that entrance | to the house had been gained by break- | ing a glass in the front door. | Headquarters Detectives Oscar Mans- | field and H. K. Wilson, who have been assigned to the case, sald last night they | would be unable to determine just what, if anything, was missing until Mrs. | Pitney, whe has been out of the city | for some time, returns Tuesday. | oy TSt SrEmS | Railways in China, which were badly | crippled during the military activities, | public I#nds problem in each of the | are slowly returning to norm: uy Now for Christmas and Take of these and gre: of selecti deposit later del venport Suite A True Bargain Bridge Lamps A True Bargain $ 4.95 Of graceful metal base and colorful shades. - Special for Thanksgi;zng 10-Pc. Dining Room Suite se- 1492 Rest-rite Chairs A True Bargain *39 Zpeies s moquette and tapes- try, reclining backs. Save! advantage lower prices ater variety on. A small holds for livery. Simmons Products At The Wright Prices Simmons ' Beauty Rest Mattress $39.50 Simmons Ace Springs..$§19.75 Simmons Day Beds....$22.50 Simmons Double Couches §9,95 Simmons Windsor Beds..$9,95 Simmons Safety Cribs..$15.75 Simmons Beauty Rest um?n, upholstered in mohair, vel- our or denim the newest and most practical combina- tion sofa and bed. start at A True Bargain ¢ *1 Tables A True Bargain ~WRIGHT |

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