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WOMA Fur- and Limited BY MARY If you had all the money you wanted to spend on dress you would doubtless have a fur coat or two, cloth coat richly trimmed with fur d A gener- ously proportioned fox scarf to wear with your tailored suit and street dresses in Spring and Summer. But with the majority of women, unless they are satisfled with the cheapest sort of furs, the question comes down to choosing whether they can afford a fur coat or a cloth coat lavishly COAT MADE OF BLACK WOOLEN MATERIAL AND WORN WITH A SEPARATE BLACK FUR SCARPF WHICH MAY LATER BE WORN WITH TWO-PIECE S8UIT OR STREET DRESS. trimmed with fur or a really nice fox scarf. One way to solve the problem is to buy a cloth coat without fur, and & | fox scarf, which may be worn with | the coat during colder weather and later on with the tailored suit or street dress, ‘There are very smart black coats of woolen material suggesting chinchilla that may be bought at quite a reasonable price, one of which ml,hb be worn with a ‘black or brown fox scarf as indicated in the sketch. The price of the furless coat and the scarf BEAUTY CHATS Hands With Character. ©Once I knew a young girl who had ths most extravagantly admired hands. In our special circle, where each girl was fairly active and in which each of us did a lot of work, hanls were sometimes neglected, _and Dorothy's were like milk white lllies when we compared them with ours. All the rest of us took some share in the house- work; Jane ran a house, unaided, for her widowed father. One or two of us went to business school, one to an art school: one with a flair for clothes, daringly opened a little hat shop of her own. One became assistant in a chemical laboratory—we were all of us using our-hands as well as our heads and enjoying our ually won ine dependence. Dorothy remained the quiet, decorative, leisurely member of our set—her hands always limp and graceful, her fingers long, her nails pink and exquisitely tended. One day we stopped envying her. When Jane's old roadster broke down Jane could get out and find and remedy the trouble, while Dorothy looked use- lessly on. Most of the rest of us could cook a meal or run a house, or make our clothes, or clatter cheerfully at a typewriter. ' “Our hands,” Jane put it, “are & part of ourselves, Dorothy's are just lovely mantelpiece ornaments.” Do you see my point? I do not mean to disparage hands that are beautiful of themselves, I merely mean that hands with character are beautiful, too. and far more interesting. A mill worker with ugly hands gives an im- reasion of beauty when she skillfully andles her factory machines. Make your hands useful and they will have character. Keep them as nicely a8 you can, with all the aids to beauty that the shops #ell, And do what you can with flar- ing cuffs and such to disguise bigness— but be more glad of charactsr than beauty in your hands. N’S PAGE. Fund for Clothes MARSHALL. ‘would be very little more than a really good fur-trimmed coat. Black is decidedly smart this season for coats and may be used in combina- tion with black, brown, beige or gray fur. Brown is good, though decidedly usual. and green is rapidly coming forward as the smart street color for the Winter. A hunter's green coat | might be worn with a beige fur with }malxcnln: green hat and beige acces- | sories. One of the most acceptable of Christ- mas gifts is a dainty nightgown, doub! | attractive if it is made by the give | This week's {llustrated circular shows | how to cut and make an attractive | nightgown that may be made effective- Iy from flesh color ercpe de chine and {ecru lace. If you would like a copy, | please send vour stamped, sclf-ad- dressed envelope to Mary Marshall and | it will be forwarded to you. (Copyright, 1920.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W SPROWLS. Pastimes. You can tell a good deal about & per- son if you can find out what his favorite pastimes are. If you were employing & person for a responsible position you might do well to make his play-life the first object of your inquiry. The things a person does when he is “doing noth- ing” are vastly jmore important for | diagnostic purposes than his accom- plishments as a worker. | Work is largely a question of habit | or skill. Play is a matter of personality. | imagination and general attitudes | toward the world of event. Some people turn always to pastimes | involving group contest and siruggic. In them the so-called pugnacious or fighting instinct is the dominant motive force. You will find these people spena- ing their spare time at boxing matches. horse races and ball games, especially foot ball games. You can put it down that these fellows belong to the extra- vert type of personality, and that they are pretty likely to be successful in those vocations that require a knowledge of other people and of ways to get along with them. They are pretty likely w succeed as traveling salesmen, if you can meake them feel that getting orders is merely a question of outplaying a | flock of competitors. They also make good preachers, 80 long as they feel that | they are fighting the hosts of hell. At/ least one-half of the general popula- tion are so constituted. “The other half of the general popula- tion are built along different lines. They are called introverts. They play a lone- some game. On off days you will fina them fishing or hunting, or merely tramping around the country by them- selves, sometimes with a small company of their kind. The favorite indoor sports of this b are chess, checkers and billiards. 'R:y are natural planners. Do well as architects, engineers and the like. Glve them an attic or & laboratory and they will come forth with a new religion or an electric light. (Copyrisht, 1920.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES they are spoken of in that multiple form. I do not think it would be ad- visable to use these on any skin that had grown sallow after many years. Improvement of this kind should come from building up the health, and per-' fect functioning of all the organs will ! bring about a great change in the skin. If you choose your neckties with an idea for becoming colors you will not need to think very much about the other choices in your clothing. The most becoming colors will be those of your eyes, and if your eyes are light, use that same color in a much darker shade, Long Eyelashes. Almost evéry woman can have long eyelashes. They need attention, just as poor hair needs it. If your hair is thin or weak, you get a tonic, you try shing- ling (supposing you're one of the hailf dozen or so left that haven't been shingled), you do something for it, anyway. But most women don't even know they have thin or poor eyelashe: or think there is nothing to be done® about it, and realize only vaguely the value long, dark, thick eyelashes give to the face. My prescription for long eyelashes is simple. If they are really very poor in quality, I see no harm in clipping off the ends for & bit. In many cases this stimulates & new growth and makes the indlividual hairs thicker or coarser when they grow their length again. To clip them use curved manicure scissor:, points away from the eyes, and snip off only the least bit from the ends. It takes perhaps a month for them to gain their full length; I think often they will grow longer. And if this treatment is repeated several times, it does, my opinion, increase their length and makes them stronger. I advise only oil as a tonic, for you cannot put stuff so near the eyes. Castor oil can be rubbed on the lashes, it makes them glossy and darkens them and promotes their growth. After you have powdered your face, which means B. C. H—If you send a self-ad- dressed, stamped envelope I shalls be lad to mail you a formula for a good | air tonic that will help your grand- | mother's trouble with her scalp. Triple | bleaches or double astringents would be very powerful and that is the reason Home in Good Taste | | BY SARA HILAND. In spite of the fact that we have the most modern methods of lighting, we | find that the fixtures first used by the early settlers in this country are still delightful. and electricity and the result is charm and convenience. Candle stands were very important pieces of furniture in early American times; in the illustration is shown one which was equipped to hold two candles This is a reproduction of an old stand, end the candles are electrified, an oval shade fitting over both of these. Maple is one of the most pleasing woods from which these stands are fashioned. If one is used beside & wing | chair in combination with & footstool covered with quilting or calico, or per- haps a cricket with a hook-rug-lixe covering. the grouping would be ve:y delightful. The shade on this lam pleated glazed chintz an of the chair is light green sateen, the seams being piped with lavender. 18 of yellow maple stand! * iron candle stand of yesterday. (Covyright. 1929.) We combine their design | the covering Buch a lovely color scheme to use next to a In the modern bridge lamps of iron it is 4180 easy to see the that powder has settled around the lashes, wet your forefinger with a drop of castor oil, and carefully smooth it over the lashes. It makes them twice s prominent at once, while doing them | permanent good. As mascara, take a teaspoonful of white vaseline, mix enough soot with it to make a thick black grease. Keep this in a tiny pot to spread along the lashes when you want real makeup. It darkens the hairs to the tips, where the color usually does not show. = 8. M. P.: The thin musilage used for setting the permanent wave after a | shampoo may be made from quince | seed or gum tragacanth, and neither of |these wculd be harmful to the hair. After the gum has dried, comb it out {of the hair and shake it until there is nothing left of the particles. | nose probably come from digestive | troubles, really from a toxic condition caused from impurities in the system. Drink plenty of water between meals and take more citrus fruit with your diet, such as grapefruit and oranges. | " The blackheads come from the same trouble as the spots and if you gét your system cleared, and keep it so, you will et rid of both conditions. Soften the impacts in the pores by applying hot wet towels to them. bathe with warm water and soap, rinse in ccol and finally very cold water. DAILY DIET RECIPE BAKER SCALLOPS. Bcallops, 2 pounds; fine dry bread crumbs, 1', cupfuls; salt, 12 teaspoonful; dry mus‘ard, ' teaspoonful; melted butter, lemon quarters, 6; minced 1 tablespoonful. SERVES 6 OR 8 PORTIONS. Mix bread crumbs, salt, mustard and melted butter together. Roll seallops in this. Place in bu tered baking dish that can sent to table and bake in hot oven about 25 minutes. Garnish dish with the lemon slices dip in the dplrlley. Mustard could be | | omitted if desired. | DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein also a | | ittle fat and starch. Lime, iron, | fodine, phosphorous and vitamins | A, B, and C present. Can be eaten by normal adults of aver age, or underweight, and by those wishing to reduce if amount of buttéra nd bread were restricted At meal at which this recipe were taken. | word is followed by several words in | M. V.: The red spots around your | THE EVENING ST. AR, WASHIN GTON, D, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1929, FEATURES., Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. December 4, 1864.—The work of ing the double railroad track between | Washington and Baltimore has been | completed. The last rail was put in | place this morning and now Washing- jton_may rejoice in being doubly tied to_Baltimore. The track in some places needs bal- lasting and_the new rails will not be used for passenger trains for a day or | two. In the meantime the repair trains are using the new track and will put it in stanch condition before it is turned ver for general use. This work has been of greater mag- nitude than the public might suppose. In many places the cuts through which the old single track passed have had i to be widened and in other places a large amount of grading has been done. The new track is being ballasted in the most substantial manner,, so that it will last for years. | The double track will be of great | importance to the traveling public. | { With two lines, in case it becomes | necessary, trains may be kept running | { constantly in both directions without danger of collision. Thus the Washington Branch Rail- road has its double track completed first and with this improvement the running time between Washington and | Baltimore doubtless will be shortened. The other sections of the railroad north of Baltimore will soon have their double tracks completed and the trav- eling public will then have all the facility and accommodation that can | be wished for between the Federal | Metropolis and New York City. James Speed, who has been ap- pointed by President Lincoln as Attor- | ney General of the United States, is a | gentleman of high personal standing | and large legal experience. He was [ formerly_an_old-line Whig of promi- nenge. ~ He has been a firm and tried friend of the administration and nas been widely known for years as a stanch advocate of the emancipation of the slaves in Kentucky. A few years ago Mr. Speed served As mayor of the city of Louisville, Ky., and for a number of years he was a member of the State Legislature of Kentucky. He will leave a large and | lucrative law practice to accept this im- | portant post in President Lincoln's cabinet. 'His appointment is especially pleasing to emancipationists in his own State and throughout the country. BRAIN TESTS In the following test, each capitalized | small letters, One of these words is| an accepted opposite of the capital- ized word. Underline the correct word. Example: GO: proceed, come, walk, hither, send. Answer: Underline “come.” ‘Time limit two minutes for the fol- lowing: kwh LAND: alr, liquid, sea, earth, sky, (2) THER] this, these. (3) WIDE: thin, small, short, round, lengihy, narrow, (4) FRIEND: associate, enemy, fight, acquaintance. (5) SMILE: sing, frown, weep, dis- approve, groan. (6) GIVE: grasp, take, want, desire, ask, covet. (7) HIGH: wi ture, tall, quic (8) MORE: least, some, short, plenty, few, less. (9) BOTTOM, middle, top, high, end, side, uppermost. (10) THEN: now, when, why, future, present, time. (11) TIGHT: insecure, weak, broken, slippery, loose, tough. (12) FIRST: second, next, both, last, end. beginning. The words must be chosen quickly, as the time limit allows but 10 seconds for each choice. : where, here, now, when, | opponent, e, short, low, minia- Answers, (2) there-here, wide-narrow, (4) friend-enemy, (5) smile-frown,’ (6) give-take, (7) high- low, (8) more-less, (9) bottomstop, (10) then-now, (11) tight-loose, (12) first- NANCY PAGE Scraps of Silk and Ribbon Make Gifts. BY FLORENCE LA GANKR, (1) land-sea, 3) Lois was a born saver. Since she had been a small child she had cher- ished bits of silks, ribbons and laces This Christmas the Rogers were trying to economize. They knew that big | expenses were ahead of them. And that they needed to get a large hospital fund put by. Accordingly, Lois began to ransack her mind and her boxes as well to see what she could find. She came across these small pleces of silks. ' | Many of them were in pastel shades. They were all of about the same weight and quality. When Naney came over one day Lols showed them™ to her. Nancy's wits, which were as nimble as Lois’ fingers, scon found uses for the silks, ribbons and even some of the laces. Since these silks are pastel in_color we will use them for boudoir things. We can make a crazy patchwork crib cover which will be adorable. Try to have the pieces angular and of varying shapes. Put them together with run- ning stitch. Then after the throw 2\ i\ , Z0\= = Mi?;: ’(‘nnlllflh”\\"' \n;ll cover the seams w ne feather stitc s with fine feath hing in washable We Wil take the ribbons and weave them in basket fashion to make a | cushion top. This will have a medium (u% xTall r‘\lllflh’ of soft silk. oudoir pillows made both ro oblong will take some of lh:n?nrnm picces. If you have lace which is wide enough and in large enough pleces you can use it in sections of the cover, stitching it by hand loosely on to the s'lk. pillow top. Cover the stitching with A band of narrow ribhon. Use the narrow Iace a8 a frilled edge for the pillow, All of which Lois did, ai which her friends who rucplvesdth:l:;ll{l‘f appreciated and enjoyed, 4 the gue their Wi 1t you menus_than plllows. care of this paj addresced enve eon Menul a bridee lunch- s they “taice. off re more intarested In per: ircloting '@ otamotal talt: relos Ded seil: ope. " Asic for"Bridxe Lunch- PARIS - Costumes like this broadtail cloth ensemble banded with hln(‘kl fox are Paris' present idea of a simple afternoon outfit. ber, including ermine flowers. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. T significant that when the people | of Wyoming looked for something appropriate with which to perpetuate the memory of the State's most illustri- ous son they chose the highest moun- taln peak they| could find, | Today the loftiest peak in the Wind | River range—13.725 feet high- bears the name of Mount Warren—in _mem. ory of Frencis Em- roy Warren, who died the other day at the age of 85. Senator Warren had much of the ruggedness that| characterizes the| mountain eak named in his honor. That heavily erect body of his sup-' ported shoulders | wide as a barn door, The hard-fought life he had led was etched in the deep lines of his face. The | bowed legs were eloquent testimonials of the frontier days he had gone through | astride a horse. The flowing mustache, | whitened by the marching decades, | dated him back to the brave old days and a generation all but vanished. For 36 years 11 months and 23 days Senator Warren served his State in the | upper house of Congress—longer than any other man who was ever a member of this body. A glance at the record reveals that next in length of service was William B. Allison of Iowa, wso served 35 years and 5 months. Only 11 Benators, all told, | have ever served as long as 30 yeays. They were: Senator Warren. Senator Allison. Justin 8. Morrill of Vermont—31 years 9 months, 24 days. Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts —31 years, 8 months, 5 days. John Sherman of Ohio—31 years, 7 months. William P. Frye of Maine—30 years, | 4 months, 20 days. John T, Morgain of Alabama—30 years, 3 months, 7 days. Shelby M. Cullom of Tilinois—30 years. Fugent Hale of Maine—30 years, | PFrancis M. Cockrell of Missouri—30 | years. | John P. Jones of Nevada—30 years. | The Senate has had few more inde- | fatigable workers than Senator Warren. He was know on Capitol :ill as the man who never had time for recreation He kept long hours at his office, and at night read legislative reports. His splendid physique, his handsome | appearance, served him well. A weaker | man would have broken under the| work that Senator Warren regarded as a day's quota. As chairman of -the appropriations | committee his duties were strenuous. | It can be underStood what a vast amount of work he did the last eight years when it is considered that every year his committee appropriated an average of something like $5,000,000,000. The chairman of that committee must know where that money goes, what it is used for and every detail concern- | ing it. Between his seventy-seventh and eighty-fifth years he looked after the expenditure of something like $40,000,- | 000.000. | During his whole career in the Sen- ate he never attempted oratory. In his | OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRI. Smart Sally. You all know Smart Alec, but do you | know Smart Sally? | Every high school teacher knows her. She is the girl who is fairly bright and very good looking. She i8 adolescent and in full flush of her beauty and | wer. Her energy is tremendous and | her self-interest greater than that. She | craves power. She longs with a deep, | deep longing to wield it over boys and | men. Woe betide the man. teacher or principal who crosses her willful way. | If this girl is placed in a mixed class there is bound to be trouble. She will be a center of unrest the while she re- mains there. ‘The boys will take a keen | interest in her, though they maintain | it at a distance. The girls will look at her in outward disdain and with in- ward envy. Sally is so smart. | It is Sally who goes to school in such a costume as to disturb the whcle‘ school, The class can pay attention to nothing and nobody but 8ally, and in | sheer helplessness the teacher is obliged | to send her to the principal. The prin- cipal ¢an see no way out but to send her home and ask to have her return in sober school day garb. Sally won't She claims her right as a free, inde- | pendent, American citizen to dress as she pleases. That's that. Now the whole community is disturbed and | school work, scheol time, school fune- ' tions are at a standstill. Sally is too | expensive. ‘ Sometimes Sally is plain sulky. She sits with her legs sprawled in the aisle, | a pout on her lovely countenance, The | up and behave like a human being and the war is on. Sally has won again. | In good condition to tackle t; | Norris and Bingham were the princi- | terested. | business, Worth signs this num- RI peeches he was direct, incisive and sinesslike. There was & vast difference in the attitudes of the Senate and House when the long special session of Congress | finally was ended. | Representatives were in a rare mood. A gay spirit prevailed during the last | few minutes of the session, which was | in marked contrast to the situation on the other side. | Laughter and applause punctuated | the remarks of each man who rose to| speak. | For more than three months they | had been idle while Senators wrestled | with the tariff. Farm relief and the tariff bill had been disposed of in quick | fashion, thanks to the strict House Tules. Earnest John Tilson, the majority | leader, rose to propose that they ad- | journ sine die. "Beaming on his col- eagues, he said: ! Mr.' Speaker, I wish to thank the | members on both sides of the aisle for the spirit of co-operation shown by | them in transacting business during | the extra session of this Congress. | Republicans smiled, Democrats grin- ned broadly. Nice words, both prob- ably thought. Short, blond, peppery | John Rankin of Mississippi arose and said with much feeling: | “Thank God, there is no gag rule in the Senate.” | Majority ~Leader beamed again: H “I hope for all of you that your| Thanksgiving turkey may be fine, that | you will not partake of it too freely for | your own good, and that you will all | return the first Monday in December | he ardu- ous work of the regular sessiol | | At the other end of the Capitol a | worried and harassed handful of men sat listening to a dull debate on the | wool schedule of the tariff bill. Smoot, | | Tilson pals. No one but the three seemed in- Finally Copeland arose and said that he was about to suggest that the Sens ate adjourn until 9:45 o'clock that eve- ning unless some one offered a good reason why he should not. Smoot attempted to, but failed to satisfy Copeland. Norris remarked that it was the same old story— once let the Sen- Ate pass a resolu- tion to adjourn and every one quit work. > Some one sug- gested & quorum call to make sure, and after repeated calls of the roli enough Senators | were gotten to- gether to transact But immediaely thereafter most of them disappeared from the chamber, Tired Senator Smoot gave in and proposed adjournment_until that eve- ning at 9:55 o'clock. Heflin objected— thought it should be 9:30 instead. They argued for a few minutes with him, but he was adamant, and asked for unanimous consent that they meet again at 9:30. Couzens promptly arose and roared, “I object.” Again they argued about it. Finally Couzens sarcastically declared: “Everybody is loafing. . . . we recess until 9:45 tonight.” It was agreed to. Only 11 were present for the final 18-minute session. 1 move | She has drawn the attention she craved. Sally is not to blame. We are. We take for granted that all adolescent boys and girls are alike. That their sex instincts will be obliging enough to follow the school schedule and the school customs and permit work to go on as usual. They won't be. Sally will make herself felt and heard if she has to take the community into the courts for a hearing. We are to blame. Some boys should be in classes by themselves. Some girls should be in girls' schools. Some ehil- dren ought to be in mixed classes. Some ought to be taught by men ex- clusively, some by women. All of them, Smart. Alec and Smart Sally, ought to have a fair deal. How can we do it? A little study, a little comman sense, a little tolerance with growing, suffering childhood, a little more money spent to pay school administrators, to build practical school buildings that allow eéxpert administra- tion, will work wonders. (Copyrisht, 1920.) Potato Rosettes. An attractive way to serve mashed | potatoes is in the form of rosettes, To | a sufficient quantity of seasoned mashed potatoes add egg ‘Mk slightly beaten or rated cheese. Beat well and use o ! Il a moistened lsuu'y bag. Then make rosettes in & buttered pan, making the rosettes large enough for an additional serving. If grated cheese has not been added to the potato, a little may be 'unwary man teacher orders her to sit | sprinkled over the top of each:rosette Place the rosettes in the oven and brown slightly. Serve at once. SUB ROSA BY MIML | Why We Love Love. ‘ Cupid is the Kandy Kid. Venus is the. leading lady. Love is the world's great Wow. Love used to be written | out in poems. 'Then it got into the| story books and just now it comes out in magazine f6rm. | But why are we so ‘daffy on heart- throbs so that the love stories are al- ways the best sellers, and love affairs the cholcest gossip? It's an nld wheeze which dates back to Adam and Eve and has come down all the “"ay from the Garden of Eden to every i ‘le park- ing space in the world It isn't a craze like Ma Jong or a fad like Ask Me Another. but a settled habit of the human race, a chronic complaint of the human heart. We may be sophisticated in other matters and know quite a lot about science and history, but we are still pop-eyed to this love business, Nature seems interested in love since the gives a girl beauty and man the eyes to see it. She sets the love moon in the sky and teaches the birds ‘to rall out to each other in the twilight She causes the orange blossoms to bud even when a girl's lover mav be a lemon. She announces a great hook- up of all the love stations in the world. Society follows suit when it presses upon us the importance of marriage and keeps the love show on the screen all the time. “You can fool all the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.” Maybe not in politics. but vou can fool all of the people all of the time on the subject of love. for they are all always interested in the afTairs of Romeo and Juliet. There are some wise guys who say that A man does his loving between ths ages of 20 and 30, or that he doesn’t flash out after he has reached | one score and ten. If you don't get h]llm before that, you don't get him at A DAILY NECESSITY all, But in Jawn tennis, the score i up to “forty love,” although after that it may be “deuce.” And a man who has closed up his heart still keeps his eves open. After the ripe old age of | 31, he likes love storles, looks at love | pictures and goes to see love shows. But why? Well, I can ask that ques- | tion better than I can answer it, but | still I ean s that Cupid is our one| best bet and that Venus will never lose | her job no matter ®hat bathing beauty | appears on the beach. We just love, | that's all. | Ours is the age of substitutes and synthetic products. We can get a ma- | chine to do what used to be done by hand and we can manufacture what used to grow up out of the earth. But | there 18 no substitute for love and no way of making a synthetic heart, | (Copyright. 1929.) Discover This Delightful Flavor For Yourself Try a cup of Wilkine Coffee for break- fast tomorrow and enjoy the freshness th only Coffee roasted right here in Washington can have. WILKINS ) T TTTTTTTI Xmas Gifts with co CLIP AND SAVE To help you, we're giving you this certificate good for 15 coupons. Read condi- tions in the certificate itself. upon.i‘ from. OCTAGON Soap Products E shown here has a valuable coupon. Save these coupons and get your Xmas gifts with them. There are toys, dolls, books, and games for children of all ages. Sporting goods for grown-ups, hundreds of articles besides the few shown here. You can obtain valuable gifts for as low as 25 coupons. There are dolls from 25 to 400 coupons; toys from 25 to 500 coupons, other Xmas gifts of every sort at a wide range of values. Start your saving of Octagon Coupons today. When you have a quantity, brin them in to us. ‘You will be surprised an pleased at the value your coupons will buy. Octagon Soap Premium Store 514 G St. NW. Washington, D. C. txperienced Advertisers Prefer The Star