Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
GROUP S FORMED .10 SERVE HOSPITAL Advisory Committee Will Con- duct Drive for $50,000 Casualty Debt Fund. Hoping to broaden the scope of Casualty Hospital, friends of the in- stitution announced yesterday that s campaign to raise $50,000 would be launched early next month. The fund will be expended in retiring a portion of the indebtedness on the new $200,- 000 building and improving the equipment. Plans for the campaign were dis- auud at a recent meeting of the ad- ry committee, composed of Ernest !Ae Jl.hncke. Acting Secretary of the Nn Senator Wesley L. Jones of gton, Senator Arthur Capper of Klmll. Senator William H. King of Utah, Senator Royal 8. Copeland of New York, Representative Willam R. Wood of Indiana, Representative R. G. Simmons of Nebraska, Representative C. J. McLeod of Michigan, Representative Ross A. Collins of Mississippi, William Green, president of the American Fed- eration of Labor: Robert V. Fleming. president of the Riggs National Bank: Oliver Owen Kuhn, managing editor of The Star; Ira E. Bennett, editor of the Washington Post; John T. Cush- ing. publisher of the Times-Herald; Lowell Mellett, edl(or of the Washing- ton News; Gans, Dr. W. C. Rives and Julius Garfinckel. Details to Be Worked Out. Detalls of the drive will be decided on at a meeting of the executive com- mittee at a date to be announced later. ‘The members are Roscoe Fertich, chair- man; Dr. Joseph D. Rogers, president of the hospital; Thomas P. Hickman, treasurer of the hospital; Harry Allmond, ‘ecref.urv of the hospital; Mrs. M. Vaughan, MH William J Brewer, 'Mts W. W. Griffith, Mrs. Bernard Walls, Brig. 3 Stephan, Evan ‘Tucker, Krnmzr Col. Wade Cooper, Col. N. Harper, Arthur Carr, Samuel H. Rogers, Dr. Malcolm G. Gibbs, Melvin Eharpe, Charles J. Waters and a8 M. Baker. Mr. Fertich announced the campaign probably would last two weeks. Teams of prominent men and women will be assigned to the different sections of the ¢ity. ‘The experience of Community Chzst solicitors will be drawn on to as- sure the success of the movement. It was explained that the hospital re- ceives no funds from the Chest, as the money needed is to pay for the building and equipment instead of maintenance. Lady Managers to Assist. Active aid is expected to be given by the board of lady managers, which has more than 200 members. These women aiready have furnished the institution with linen, draperies and other acces- sories. The officers of their organiza- tions are: Mrs. M. J. Vaughan, presi- dent; Mm ‘Thomas Calver, vice president; Mrs. Henry J. Weber, sec- ond vice president; Mrs. C. Barber, thl.rd vice president; Mrs. 8. J. Buynit- fou: president; Mrs. B, WI-UB, fifth vice president; Mrs. Wil- Mre sienry B i se. enry 1 rlwn!t. correspon sec- yetary; m‘lm F. Dunmire, l;fiuh:nl correspor ucrem Mrs. m Ji Brewer, treasurer, and Mrs. Edgar T._Brown, flnancial secretary. The board of directors has adopted the following slogan: Aln cinnmmmg hospital, run by flu ople, Wl no de\ued emergency memn or :ur'inl treatment on account of race, golor, a{m, tesidence or- financial condi- < List of Directors. The directors are Dr. Je Rogers, Thomas P. Hickman,, gnn—y . Allmond. Stephen E. Bflm as Baker, Mrs. M. J. Vaughan, Samuel E Rogers, Daniel J. Donovan, Malcolm G. Gibbs, Mrs. W. J. Brewer, Charles J. oseph D. Waters, Odell S. Smith, Arthur Carr, Bvan H. Tucker, George S. Watson, Ira E. Bermett, Ed:u M. Mayne, Mrs, W. W. Griffith, Mrs, Bernard Walls and George Clagett. The hospital attracts many tourist patients because it is lacated at Massa- chusetts avenue and l:!.hu\ street. mortheast, near the Capitol, the Library of Congress and the Union Station. Its work has increased recently, when Dis- trict officials ordered that all emer- gency patients from aceidents occur- ¥ing east of Seventh street should be femoved to Casualty. The new building, five stories tall, is/is & Federal parole law now operative of brick and stone construction and|in the District, no strictly local law, Teinforced with concrete. The corner stone was laid by Secretary of the Treasury Andrew W. Mellon in No- ‘vember, 1928. Marrmge Licenses. Jobn A. Horner, 49. and May B. tin, B hon ot Beliimore "Ledr” v, M5B William Gordon, 23, this city, and M the man, 20, Baltimore, Md. Rev. *;w o M elthlrlll dorrs Yard , Muirkirk, Md rfaretty P. c. len xs-nme. ?6. Bot "b.’ olde " Both 5 B an-y % Spingavili, oa. Ruthi s city, an e a6, B "Rev. Jame -~ ll;d Marianthe Bona- !‘l-nd E. Jontl. 22 n N ‘4. bolh o( R.\chmonfl \' Rev. John E. lnkHE.A Yd. 5! nd Loulse B. Kasey, Rev. Samiuel J. ek 5 unso; ernie Me- “lciflnnnd. va. 'Rev. Allan Joh, [ n Tooth oH JoBn F. Chester. 23, this city, and ok, 30, Lr?n' MerBers, Mo R % fit.m., 5, Cavarinh 28, and Ruth B. Stone. i Ny g m'"d 9. this elts, and s cits, an Evk ammon. e adtartnl Va7 AT Births Reported. R B St #o’:mln 8. a2 d ok, 28, 1. Gnevy nnie irgil C, and. b Cand i naid © and Harvierr L Mth:uon. bor. Alliam E. and A indly ce. Deaths Reported. ‘The fflhfnml deaths have been reported to gu" aith Department during the lest 3¢ Louiss othoron. Alice mumu 34, 430 1 Y iy . 79, u Wat '""7:1! A n -er_n § y il Masonic and Bastern A" Bpeakinan. 6, 838 0" st Espey, 60, George Washington Hos- am H_ Bishoo, 85, 801 N. Car. ave. s.e. g3 ‘P St xnon l;-mr'n i 5, 830 dence Hosvital 42 Providence 1314 14t] e, Ertiaren's Ros- ]lilllmly 0. ;lfll Ainger pl. )m ur AE ol THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Among the members of the advisory committee for the forthcoming campaign to raise $50,000 for Casualty Hospital, shown above, are: Front row (left to right): Isaac Gans, Dr. Joseph D. Rogers, Senator Wesley L. Jones, Senator Arthur Capper and Senator Royal 8. Copeland. Back row: Oliver O wen Kuhn, Harry Allmond, Dr. W. C. Rives, Acting Secre- tary of the Navy Ernest Lee Jahncke and Robert V. Fleming. BOARD OF PAROLE | URGED FOR DISTRICT Chamber of Commerce Group Suggests Bill for Congress’ Approval. Creation of a District parole board to examine the physical, mental and moral records of District prisoners; to recommend proper forms of corrective treatment and to provide a system for determining the proper time of release and rehabilitation of the prisoner in the community was proposed yesterday by a special subcommittee of the Wash- ington Chamber of Commerce, which has been studying the matter for sev- eral months. The committee, under leadership of Thomas P. Littlepage, has embodied its recommendations in the form of a bill which was approved at a meeting yes- terday. The bill will be submitted to the chamber’'s executive committee and an attempt made to have it introduced in Congress. ‘Would Have Three on Board. ‘The parole board would consist of three citizens of the District, appointed by the Ri:'-rl::t Commm‘ifinen..h;mz serving without pay. Provision made for appointment of parole offi- cers, in such number as may from time to time be authorized by Congress, whose duty it will be to conduct the fleld work upoon which the actions and decisions of the board would be based. ‘Within certain prescribed limits, the proposed parole board would have Rawer to parole pmonan for good be- avior, such led prisoners to re- main in the l.l custody and under control of the superintendent of the institution from which they are paroled until the expiration’ of the maximum term of their sentences. Have Federal Law Now. In proposing enactment of such & law for the District, the chamber’s sub- committee points out that while there formulated to meet local conditions, has ever been enacted. Committee members and guests who attended the meeting included Thomas P. Littlepage, chairman; Miss M. Pearl McCall, assistant United States district attorney; M. M. Barnard, superintend- ent of District prisons; e 8. Wil- son, director department of Dubllc wel- fare; Maj. Willlam L. Peak, assistant superintendent of prisons; Mrs. Ada C. Payne, Miss Edna J. Sheehy, Judge Michael M. Doyle, Rudolph Jose, Charles J. Stockman, John A. Eckert and Joseph E. Dayton. WESLEY GIRLS PLAN FOR TWO PLAYS HERE Foundry M. E. Church Group to Complete Preparations To- morrow Night. Preparations for the presentation of two plays, “Parlor Matches” and “Mrs Oakley’s Telephone,” will be completed tomorrow night by the Wesley Girls of Foun M. E. Church at rehearsals to be held in the church auditorium. The plays will be presented under the direction of Mrs. Allen Gardner at 8:15 p.m. at the church, Sixteenth and P streets. The same cast in these plays pre- sented “The Laughing Cure” last year. *The Thin vy Offers Hulk Of Ill-Fated S-51 For Sale as Scrap Bids Also to Be Accepted on Five Sub Chasers and Patrol Boat. By the Associated Press. The hulk of the submarine 8-51, in which 33 men lost ‘their lives after it had collided with a steamer in 1928, ;:a offered for sale yesterday by the vy. On September 25, 1025, the §-51 was on a test crulse when it was rammed and sunk by the City of Rome off Block Island, R. I. Three of the crew escaped. Efforts to raise the submarine that Fall failed because of Winter seas, and the following June it was hoisted to the surface and towed to New York, where the bodies were removed and identified. Since then, the submarine has been stripped of its motors and fittings and the bare hulk is to be sold. ‘The Navy also announced it would accept bids on flve submarine chasers and the patrol boat Privateer. THEFT OF POOR BOX GETS YEAR IN PRISON Kentuckian, Giving Name of Fran- eis King, Sentenced for S8t. Augustine’s Church Robbery. Because he carried away the box of St. Augustine's C:thunc church th street near L, Francis King, whose only address is Kentucky, will lose one year's freedom by order of Judge Robert E. Mattingly, acting Police Court magistrate. ‘This, the fourth robbery of this poor box recently, was performed several days ago. King, it was said, strolled into the church with a pasteboard box under his arm. A few minutes later he emerged. The carton appeared heavier, Some one called a policeman and the two followed the stranger into an alley, where King began counting money. ‘When he had shaken about a dollar in nickels and pennies from the box, the policeman stepped to his side. King dmpp!d the box and money and started nm He lost a lively three-block “How hn{nhnvo you been in town?” Judge Ma y asked the defendant yesterday. “Two days.” “Well, you will stay here for just one year more.” The poor box was valued at $16.50 ggowu said to contain approximately —_— END WEEK AT CAMP 75 Directors, Councilors and In- structors Conclude Course, ‘Trainees from Washington and a dozen other cities and townl have just completed a week's course of instruc- tion at the Second Annual Summer Camp Training Institute at Kamp Kah- lert, on West River, held under auspices of the Council of Social Agencies. Some 75 eamp directors, councilors and com- mittee members were in tendlnce Local organizations co-o}u ing with the council in the work of the institute include the District Council, Boy Scouts of America; Associated Charities’ Sum- gler togtms!lo:zn:m gftl, anys Club, hris lety, Girl Scouts of mdu-lct Bo.lvnlan Army, Y. M. ‘ the g Fellow" Borrows on The Morris Plan RED CROSS SERVICE WILL BE KEYNOTE President Hoover to Welcome Delegates at Convention Here May 5. The service of the American Red | Cross in aiding in the preservation of health, prevention of accidents and pro- tection of the home, will be the keynote of the national convention of the organ- ization to be held here for four days beginning May 5. President Hoover, who is president of the Red Cross, will welcome the dele- gates to the convention at the opening meeting at 10:30 o'clock on the morning of May 5. All meetings will be held in the council chamber of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. Chairman John Barton Payne will preside, and the invocation at the open- ing session will be delivered by Mgr. Buckey of St. Matthews’ Church. Other speakers will be James L. Fieser, vice chairman in charge of domestic opera- tions; Ernest P. Bicknell, vice chairman in charge of insular and foreign oper- ations, and James K. McClintock, vice chairman in charge of finance. Addresses to Be Broadeast. ‘The addresses at the opening meet- ing, including that of Constance Payne, Terrs Haute, Ind, school girl, who will Tepresent more than 8,000,000 junior and high school pupils, members of the Junior Red Cross, will be broadcast by the National and Columbia broadcasting systems. Brig. Gen. Frank R. Keefer, retired, chairman of the District of Columbia chapter, will preside at an evening meeting the first day, to which the ublic is invited. Judge Payne will de- iver the principal address, reviewing the year's work of the Red Cross, in the Nation and in the world. Dr. Rene Sand, technical councilor of the League of Red Cross Societies, Paris, will speak on the work of Red Cross groups in more than 50 nations. 100 Junior Delegates. More than 100 junior delegates are expected to attend the convention. They will hold separate sessions, to hear their own speakers, among whom will be Sec- lr’ut.nry of the Interior Ray Lyman Wil- ur. ‘The juniors will adopt resolutions on problems of their organization, Dr. Harry Bruce Wilson, national director of the Junior Red Cross, will open their sessions and preside until they elect their own convention chairman and other officers. This junior convention, attracting girls and boys from 14 to 20 years of age, is one of great interest to edu- cators, inasmuch as the delegates are elected in their own schools, or eity junior eouncils, representing groups which draft their own programs with- out dictation from elders, and in Wash- ington form a lell-tovermn[ convention, Rev, W. A, Sharp Dend STAUNTON, Va., April 26 (Special). ~—Rev. W. A, !hlrp, aged 70, died at his home here Wednesday, following an iliness of over a year's durlnon ‘The deceased, a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, had at one time served the Staunton circuit, and since gu retirement 12 years ago had resided ere, APRIL 27, 1930—PART ONE. 7 IBUSINESS LEADERS |SUN SURROUNDED MEET TOMORROW Hoover Will Address Four- Day Meeting of U. S. Cham- ber of Commerce. Contribution of both Government and business toward the Accomrmhment of | economic stabilization will be widely discussed at the eighteenth annual meeting_of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States which will open here tomorrow. More than 3,000 busi- ness men representing 1,700 Chambers of Commerce and trade organizations are expected to attend the [our-day meeting. President Hoover heads the list of governmental officers who will par- ticipate in five general sessions de- voted to current economic questions upon which public attention has been centered. In addition to Mr. Hoover, others speakers are: Robert P. Lamont, Secretary of Com- merce; Alexander Legge, chairman of the Federal farm board; Ogden L. Mills, | Undersecretary of the Treasury; J. W. Pole, controller of the currency; John Lord O’Brian, Assistant to the Attor- ney General, and Dr. John M. Gries, chief, division of public construction, Department of Commerce. State - governors, Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, Myers Y. Cooper of Ohlo lnfl Harry G. Leslie of Indiana, will speak. Questions to Be Considered. Foremost amorng the questions for consideration are stabilization and em- ployment, Federal farm board policies, chain and branch banking, of) and forest conservation, trade practices, taxation, foreign trade, public con- struction as a factor in business sta- bilization, branch factories abroad, water transportation, old-age pensions, rallroad consolidation, centralization in Federal Government and the future of air transportation. ‘The first general session will be Ce- voted to s broad survey of the im- mediate future, the difficulties con- fronted and the economic pitfalls to be avoided. At this session, the central theme of the meeting, “What's Ahead for Business,” will be emphasized. ‘The second session will appraise tne work done in the direction of business stabilization and will survey the pos- sibilities of effective, concerted action in planning for the future on a national le. ‘The third will be given over to con- sideration of Federal Farm Board operations as a far-reaching experiment both in government and economics. The position of the Government will be put forward by Mr. Legge, while the business attitude will be presented by Dan A. Millett, stockman, of Denver. ‘There also will be general discussion of the subject from the floor. ‘The fourth will bring business atten- tion to bear upon the growing per- plexities of taxation and fiscal policy. Canadian Will Speak. The final general session will (ive‘ an opportunity for a review of the re)luomhlg between American and Canadian business and s summing up of the entire meeting. At this session Lirut. Col. J. H. Woods, president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, publisher and business man, will be the prlncipu speaker. - At the second general session the possibilities of D]lnnlnfi and maintain- ing business stability will be considered. Business stability, it is pointed out, will be discussed not as an academic ques- tion, but rather in the light of prac- tical accomplishments. Practical meth- | ods for maintaining stabilization of business and employment will be put forward. At this session, Secretary of Commeree Lamont will open the dis- cussion with an address on the stabili~ zation work of the Government. The work of the national business survey conference will be reviewed by the chairman, Julius H. Barnes. Another speaker, F. 5. Snyder, chairman of the board of the Institute of American Meat Packers, will discuss the “Eco- nomic Bases of Busjness Stabilization,” and Alfred Reeves, gencral manager of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, will present the question of “Centralizing Reports on Business Con- dition: the first necessary step in business planning. ‘These addresses, the chamber an- nounced, will be followed by general discussion of the subject of stabiliza- tion from the viewpoint of specific industries. ‘The business viewpoint will be put forward by an equally prominent group of business leaders, including Willlam Butterworth, chairman of the board, Deere & Co., Moline, Ill.; Mr. Barnes; Melvin A. Traylor, president the First National Bank, Chicago; Fred W. Sar- gent, prelldent Chjcago & North West- ern Co.; Felix M. McWhirter, | pmident t! Ptoplu State Bank, In- dianapolis; Howard Coonley, president ‘Walworth Co., Boston; Ernest T. Trigg, president John Lucas & Co.. Philadel- phia; H. H. Rice, General Motors_Cor- ration; John Kirby, president Kirby umber Co., Houston; E. J. Kulu,l prealdent Otis Steel Co., Cleveland: B. Reocser, president the Barnsdall Cm’ ration, Tulsa, Okla.; H. R. Mac- Millan, president California Oil and Gas Association, and Henry L. Harri- man, chairman New England Power Association. Bank Examiner Appointed. LYNCHBURG, Va., April 26 (Spe- cial) —Winsion C. Baber of this ety has been appointed an assistant national bank examiner and has been assigned to the sixth Federal reserve district with headquarters in Atlanta. He has gone there to begin his work. Mr. Baber was formerly with the Peoples’ National Bank here. Bigger and Better = BY THICK IRON MIST Discovery Reported by Direc- tor of Virginia University Observatory. By the Assoclated Press. PHILADELPHIA, April 26—A thick moving iron vapor that hangs in the atmosphere of the sun was among the scientific discoveries reported to the ' American Philosophical Society today. The swirling of the hot, vaporized iron, measured only during total eclipses of the sun, was reported by Dr. Samuel A. Mitchell, Leander McCormick Observatory of the University of Virginia. ‘There appears to be more of this iron, he said, than the proportion of water vapor in earth’s atmosphere, and it circulates up and down. But it can form no mists, molten rain or clouds, because it is much too hot to condense. somewhere around 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Some of Other Mixtures. Some of the other mixtures compos- ing the sun’s “air” are calcium, rising to about 8,500 miles, hydrogen to 7,000 and helium to 5,500. . Mitchell said iron and hydrogen are fairly abundant. How much it would cost a man to cool with a refrigerator at the center of the sun was told by Prof. John O. Stewart of Princeton, in de- scribing how stars are made. He said if power cost one-thousandth of a cent a kilowatt a century—that is one- billionth its present price, the re- frigeration bill at the sun’s center would be $50,000,000 a minute. The tempera- ture outside the refrigerator would be about 75,000,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Dr. Harlow Shapley, director of Har- vard Observatory, described the “red shift” of light arriving from vast dis- tances, suggesting nuv. it may possibly set & limit to man’s vision. ‘The “red shift” is seen in spectro- scopes and is apparent lennhcnln. of the light rays that come from very dis- tant celestial objects. The redness is due to the greater length of these rays and that in turn leads to a supposition | o that the celestial objects are traveling away from earth, a motion which would make their light rays longer. Distant Space Mystery. A little of the mystery of distant space was removed by Dr. John 8, Plas- kett, director of the Dominion Astro- physical Observatory of Victoria, Brit- ish Columbia. He said the ‘“essential sameness” of the whole universe is in- dicated in some recent investigations. showing that the mysterious spiral nebulae are only vast star collections like our own. Our great family of stars if seen from some far-off nebula prob- nb}y lwoum appear as another spinning spiral. volving like the spiral nebulae he of- fered in his own discoveries from ob- serving about 800 stars, indicating & whirling speed of about 200 miles a sec- ond, enough to cause the entire milky | way to make one revolution in about 300,000,000 years. Democrats to Open Campaign. FREDERICKSBURG, Va., April 26 (Special) —The first political speaking in this section in the Democratic nomi- nation race in the eighth congressional distriet is scheduled for King Geor Court House Monday, May 5, when Crandal Mackey, n‘nualve Arlington County attorney, will make an address. Mr, Mackey is running on a platform in which one of the chief planks is \f luan to the continuancee of the tead law, but he intends to appeal to the voters on a number of other director of the| Proof that our system is re-| RIGHT REV. DR. ALEXANDER. MEMBER OF COMMONS WEDS 4TH TIME AT 73 Will Thorne Says Friends Are Wrong in Telling Him He Is S8illy—Home for Children. By the Associated Press. LONDON, April 26.—WIill Thorne, 73, who has been in the House of Com- mons 25 years and is one of the charac- ters of that body, today married for the fourth time, his bride being Miss Beatrice Nelly Collins, 42, one of his constituents. “I have had three wives, and they have all been jolly good ones,” declared the bridegroom. “Married life is all right if you pull together. in it % friends have been telling that I am silly to married mree is mar- my time of life, bw! utterly with them. Of course, in thi riage we are not thinking so much of the children as of ourulvu If I dled my children, although they are grown up, would have no real home. Now they Thome: family of six daughters and two sons knew nothing of their father’s intentions until three weeks ago, when he told them of his engagement. The ADDRESS TO MARK GREEK INDEPENDENCE Right Rev. Dr. Alexander, Arch- bishop of North and South Amer- ica, to Conduct Services. Right Rev. Dr. Alexander, archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Church of North and South America, will officiate and speak at special services at 10 o'clock at St. Sophia's Greek Orthodox Church, Eighth and L streets, in comemoration of the centenary of Greek independence now being celebrated in Greece. In conducting the services he will be assisted by Archdeacon P. Comninos of the Greek Orthodox Church, who ac- companies him from New York today, | and by Rev. B. Papanica, pastor of the local chureh. ‘The archibishop is the recognized head of the Greek Church in America. ‘There are two branches of the church, one r ized by the Greek govern- ment and the patriarchate, head of the church throughout the world, and one uuofllnlnlly orf-nlzed Dr. Alexander been appointed archbishop by both the patriarchate and the holy synod, and is the only officlal in America so authorized. He is one of the organizers of the Greek Orthodox Church in America. About 2,000 members of the Greek colony here are expected to greet him. SHUBERT COMPANY SUES TO ENJOIN USE OF SONG Alle, Rival Corporation Is Ap- propriating Part of Its Motion Picture Production. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 26—The Shu- bert Theatrical Co. yesterday asked the Supreme Court for an injunction to re- strain the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from using the song “The Narrati as part of its motion picture production “The Rogue Song.” The company also asked $100,000 damages. It asserted that “The Narrative” which is sung in the motion picture by Lawrence Tibbett, is similar to the song “The Shirt” a of the revue “Vogues of 1924, e plaintiffs declared Herbert Stot- hart, composer, and Clifford Grey, lyric writer, assigned all rights in ‘“The Shirt” to the Shubert Co. fhrciiorveiriorinbo o In England a millionaire is one who has an income of not less than $250,000 ® year, and the number of these has shrunk in the last six years from 598 bride’s brother recently married. Open a Cha to 497, rge Account Pay Weekly or Monthly Any man can afford our terms . . . and on such convenient pa account. You pay nothing privileges, yments we invite your additional for credit Come in now and choose a new Spring suit. Men’s Spring Suits, $25 to $35 EISEMAN'S Seventh & F Sts. As a Permanent Expression of Good Taste, Select-- Granada William and Mary Martha Washington Le Moderne designs. R. Harris & Company is co-operating fully with the Sterling Silver- Invitations are obtainable here for the “What I Think About the Vogue for Sterling” Prize Contest as Adver- tised by the Guild in the rotogravure section of this newspaper. Our windows uguhrly display typical selections of Sterling which may be smiths’ Guild of America. A FEW OF THE MANY ATTRACTIVE DESIGNS WHICH WE STOCK REGULARLY 5. Fairfax 6. Dolly Madison 7. Lady Diana 8. Orchid 9. Louis XIV HETHER it is for the table of the bride-to-be or for the woman who has grown tired of her mis- mated assortment of silverware and is with a beautiful matching service of Sterling—we pre- sent an extensive selection of lovely patterns, very newest are included with the traditionally fine And for each pattern of Sterling Flatware we have a generous selection of Sterling Hollow- ware in either identical or harmonizing motifs. “starting anew” The chosen by the prize winners. R.Harris &, Co. . 10. 11 12. 13. Rhythm Virginia Carvel Pointed Antique Pine Tree | F Street at 1lth Jewelers and Diamond Merchants for More Than Half a Century