Evening Star Newspaper, May 18, 1930, Page 14

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GASUALTY HOSPITAL TOOPENFUNDDRIVE Campaign for $50,000 to Be Launched Tomorrow Under Fertich’s Direction. ‘With 60 workers in the field, the cam- paign to raise $50,000 toward retiring the indebtedness on the new $200,000 Casualty Hospital building and for pur- | chase of additional equipment, will be | launched tomorrow under the direction | of Roscoe Fertich, chairman of the executive committee. The campaign will be conducted from the former of of the Continental | Trust Co., at Fourteenth and H streets, which have been made available with- out charge by the People's Life Insur- ance Co. Other members of the executive com- mittee who will assist Mr. Fertich in conducting _the drive for funds are Dr. Joseph D. Rogers, president of the hos- pital; Thomas P. Hickman, hospital treasurer; Harry Allmond, secretary of the hospital; Mrs. M. J. Vaughan, Mrs, William J. Brewer, Mrs. W. W. Griffith, Mrs. Bernard Walls, Brig. Gen. Anton Stephan, Evan Tucker, Stephen E. XKramer, Col. Wade Cooper, Robert N. Harper, Arthur Carr, Samuel H. Rogers, Dr. Malcolm G. Gibbs, Melvin Sharpe, Charles J. Waters and Thomas M. Baker. City to Be Divided. Mr. Fertich yesterday expressed the ths campaign would last The city will be divided section ;Mmih:lrw s uuz hese ups to conduct canvass 'l mn‘l:grp:\munr to that employed by Community Chest workers. Casualty Hospital, it was explained, does not receive any of the Community Chest funds, as the money it needs is to be used for Bu‘:‘lf.mllumd equipment rather than maintenance. Located centrally in the northeast section of the city, Casualty Hospital does & great deal of emergency work, much of which is on a charity basis. In 1929 Casualty had 4,674 emergency cases and 2,617 ambulance calls. Where it is necessary for emergency patients without funds of their own to stay in the hospital for more than an hour, the District of Columbia pays $2 & day for each one. As'most of the hospital's i business is of an emergency nature, outside financial sssistance must be had, because. as one official explained, | “4t is difficult to provide medical and surgical attention and food for $2 & day.” Modern New Hospital. The new hospital building is built wlong scientific lines and equipped to provide patients with & of care Ccommensurate with the following slogan recently adopted by the board of di- be taken by the board agers, which has a membership of more than 200. These women already have furnished the institution with more than $50,000 worth of linen, draperies and other tw&-. uu:h:llulhln 48 president of this organ! g ;m for the campaign have been of the Navy; Senators Wes- e 'yowper, William American Federation of bor; Robert V. Fleming, president of the Riggs National Bank; Ira E. Bennett, editor of the Washington Post; Oliver ©O. Kuhn, managing editor of The ohn_T. Cusl 3 blisher of fllanen, editor of the Washington News; Iseac Gans, Dr. W. C. Rives and Julius Garfinckel. Dr. Rogers became mt and su- perintendent of the in 3 and the of the institution dur- the fow is in & large S e atbutable to his efforts. DRAMA GUILD PLAYERS TO GIVE “THE TEMPEST” Rehearsals to Begin Tomorrow in Preparation for PerformaNces at Sylvan Thq ‘The Community Drama is the presenta- ‘Washington tion of Shak: 's “The Tempest” st the National Sylvan Theater, in the Monument grounds, on June 19 and 20. Marie Moore Forrest, executive secre- tary ¢f the Guild, and Will Hutchins, dean the School of Art, American ‘Univers] are in charge. Rehesreals will begin tomorrow night ot the Pranklin Administration Build- ing. The United States Marine Band will play the incidental music at both s:;mrmmcea and there will be group ces, ‘The organisation of the guild for the coming year will be completed ‘Thursday afternoon at 4:45 o'clock in the Franklin Building, with the selec- tion of & new governing board, which will include three representatives of the guarantor members. Mrs. John Otto Johnson will preside. ‘The advisory council likewise will elect its repre- sentatives this week. William E. Bryant of the Washington Readers’ Club is temporary council chairman and Miss Hannah Stolar of the Jewish Com- munity Center Dramatic Soclety is sec- Tetary. ‘The board of governors, when com- pleted, will elect the officers of the guild. The executive secretary will be eppointed by the Community Center Department. or, Guiid of Ex-Newspaper Man Dies at 101 B8T. LOUIS, May 17 (#).—Daniel M. Grissom, 101, & former St. Louls news- g{lper man, died today at the Oid Folks’ lome at Kirkwood, a suburb. In sn interview just before his 101st birth- day anniversary, January 26, Grissom said he was “beginning to feel my years.” TWO SPELLERS TIE .| men's organisation, will have to be ;| plcked at a future contest, for Miss In the upper photoj pital building, while the equipment. INPRESS CLUB BEE Miss Strayer and Murray Re- maining Standing in Tough Contest. ‘The victor in last night's spelling| bee, staged at the National Press Club, between members of the Women's Na- tional Press Club and the newspaper Martha Strayer of the Washington Daily News and K. Foster Murray of the Norfolk, Va, Pilot and other Southern newspapers, stood up under the grueling orthographic pace and the outcome was deciared a draw. Ray T. Tucker of the New York Telegram, winner in the recent contest between members of Congress and newspaper men, went down on the word * manteau,” as the eleventh to be - nated in the 17 that participated. Part of the contest was broadcast by the National Broadeasting Co., but the stretched it out beyond the allotted time, and the audience voted to have the winner chosen anon. Jameés D. Preston, superintendent of the Sénate Press OGallery, acted as “schoolmaster” in the earlier part of | the contest, but later turned over the | scholastic desk to Mrs. Alfred J. Bros- esident general of the he American Revolution, who served on the board of judges with Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth and Senator Tom Connally of Texas. The contestants and the words that plucked them out of the contest in order follows: Wilbur Forrest, New York Herald Tribune, trafficking; Paul Anderson, 8t. Louls Post-Dispatch, in- finitesimal; Miss Isabelle Storey of the National Park Service, scimitar; Fred Emery, United States Daily, neuras- thenia; Mra. Elizabeth May Craig, Port- land, Me., Press-Herald and Express, plaguy; Marcy McCracken Jones 6f the Edgar News Service, caffeine; Nell Ray Clarke Herrington, Philadelphia Public &uwfll}r‘n‘x:\\xxdoi’ David Rankin Bar- n Post, chrysanthemum; Stella MeCord, Washington Post, super- stitious; John D. Rhodes, official re- porter 6f the United States Senate, meerschaum; Ray T. Tucker, New York Telegram, portmantéau; Catherine Hackett Turlington, Woman's Journal, | cabalistic; Kate Bcott Brooks, Chicago | Tribune, pharisaic; Maud McDoun{l,‘ Cleveland Leader, Antirrhinum; Farmer Murphy, Baltimore Sun, cannoneer. FOREST LAND ACREAGE PURCHASES APPROVED By the Associated P ‘The purchase of 422737 acres of forest land at a cost of 31,202,172 was | approved yesterday by the National | Forest Reservation Commission. | ‘The commission also spproved the | establishment of new Federal purchase | units in Kentucky, Arkanses, Mis- #issippi and Louisiana. e purchase program provides for the acquisition of a total of 830 tracts of land &t an average cost of $2.84 per acre. MAN HALTED BY POLICEMAN TELLS PLANS TO ROB STORE| Prisoner Admits Three Previous Thefts From Place He Had Selected Again. M. Gordon, colored, 2250 'ba.i?{h” place, recent from Lesvenvorth hnmt;x;yfi sdter serving en on_housel charges, 'umm wmm:m%olltmm th street, for y_afternoon, lice, when Officer D. F. Donohue met him &nd deterred his course to the tenth precinct. Gordan was charged with three cases of housebreaking after he admitted king into Nachman's store on three differént ions and making off with goods valued at $20. Qordan was wnklnaulllmrely up th street in vicinity of s Atate when Officer ue 'whm are you going?” asked the afficer. Gordan answered the same quéstion three times by stating, “Nowhere.” ‘The fourth time the question was put to him he admitted he was on his way for & fourth visit to Nachman's store. ‘The officer wasn't agreeable, so Gordon accompanied him to the precinct. is elated now. For two mmonths he has been compiaining | of robberies at his store. Several months | ago he called the tenth precinct and 8aid something had to be done about it. He declared he didn't see why robbers concentrated all their attacks . THE SUNDAY STAR., WASHINGTON, VIEWS OF NEW CASUALTY HOSPITAL ph is shown the imposing entrance to the new hos- shows a typical room in the building, with modern —Star Staff Photos. AIRPLANES DEPART FOR CUBAN FLIGHT Attack Ships Will Give Dem- onstration for Island Republic. Having completed a week of maneu- vers here in connection with what is re- garded by the War Department as one of the most important tests ever made of anti-aircraft defense methods, nine glnu of the 13th Squadron, 3rd Attack roup, Fort Crockett, Galveston, Tex., are on the way from Bolling Field to Havana, Cuba, to demonstrate to the Cubans the latest form of “frightful- ness” in modern warfare. The planes took off from the local field, where théy have been based dur- ing the maneuvers, at 2 o'clock yes- terday afternoon with Pope Pield, Fort Bragg, N. C., as their first stopping point. From Pope Field they are to fly to Jacksonville, Fla. Their next hop will be to Miami, where they will be joined by other planes of the group from Texas before the overseas jump to Hayana. The attack planes are an Army d velopment since the World War and a: said to be the hardest hitting weapons of warfare yet devised, each plane cas rying six heavy machine guns and um of 25 fragmentation bombs. An entire squadron of 18 planes, it s claimed, has the fire power in attack of an entire infantry division with field artillery. Eight LB-7 twin:engined bombard- ment planes of the 2nd Bombardment Group, which have been participating in the maneuvers with Bolling Pleld as a base, also took off yesterday afternoon tion, Langley Field, Hampton, Va. n&th ba'nb:;, delayed fm'pthe installa- tion of & new engine, took off late in the afternoon for home. | Tie in Spelling Bee I on him, when there were so many big banks around . Since then ‘Donohue has been eloul‘:-whln, his store and yesterday “got man. K. FOSTER MURRAY, IDELEGATES ARRIVE FOR AD FEDERATION Convention to Open Here To- morrow and Run Through Thursday. “Advertising, a Servant of the Con- sumer,” will be the theme of the twenty- sixth annual convention of the Advertis- ing Federation of America, which opens tomorrow at the Willard Hotel for sessions continuing through Thuraday. More than 2,500 advertising leaders from all parts of the United States and from abroad were beginning to arrive last night and today. A sightseeing tour tomorrow morning will terminate at the White House, where President Hoover will officially open the convention and extend & of welcome to the delegates on the south lawn. This will be followed by a luncheon at which Senator Allen of Kansas, editor and publisher, will deliver the keynote. Many Government officials will participate in the convention, among them being Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of Interior; James J. Davis, Secretary of Labor; Dr. Julius Klein, Assistant Secretary of Commerce; Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi, Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas, Representative Ruth Hanna McCormick of Illinois and heads of various Govern- ment bureaus whose work brings them in contact with advertising problems. ‘Women Fly Here. As an advance delegation from the Advertising Women's Club of Phila- delphia, 25 women delegates landed in eight airplanes at Bolling Field yester- day afternoon. Miss Amelia Earhart led them in her own plane. They were met at the fleld by officials of the Advertising Club of Washington and others. Charles C. Younggreen of Milwaukee, president of the Advertising Federation, and Gilbert T. Hodges of New York general convention chairman, have been in Washington since last Thursday making arrangements for the meeting with representatives of the local club. The 2,500 delegates and guests will represent 125 ad clubs and 25 groups of national advertising interests. ‘The general sessions of the conven- tion will be held tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday. Departmental sessions, at which every phase of advertising will be discussed, will be held Tuesday and Wednesday mornings. “Never before in the history of adver- tising will we be able to show such in- tegnv.lon as this year,” Mr. Younggreen said. The Willard yill witness the gather- ing of the delegates this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in advance of the conven- tion and a band concert will be given by the Veterans of Foreign Wars band and drum corps. Between 4 and 5 o'clock the delegates will visit the Pan American Building, where they will be welcomed by Dr. 8. Rowe, director general of the Union. Mr. Younggreen will respond and music will be furnished by the United States Marine Band. Later in the afternoon the advertisers will be taken on & boat ride down the P?wmn as guests of the steamer Macs alester, Luncheon Tomerrow. At_the luncheon tomorrow following the White House reception, Ernest S. Johnston, president of the Advertising Club of Washi ; Dr. Luther H. Reichelderfer, president of the Board of Commissioners; Benmnett Chapple, gen- eral chairman of the program commit- tee and Mr. Younggreen will make ad- dresses of welcome. Besides Senator Allen, other speakers at the luncheon include Earnest Elmo Calkins, Joseph H. Appel and Merle Thorpe, editor of Nation's Business. ‘The annual banquet Tuesday night wiil be the medium for further messages to the advertisers. The kers in- clude Walter A. Strong, chairman of the board of the federation and pub- lisher of the Chicago Daily News; Sen- | ator Harrison of Mississippi; Francis H. Bisson, vice president of the Guaranty Trust Co., New York, and Louis Wiley, business Times. anager of the New York At Wednesday's session the speakers will be Representative Ruth Hanna McCormick of Illinoils, Secretary of La~ bor Davis, of the Interior Wilbur, Dr. Klein and Malcolm Muir, m‘:xldent of the McGraw-Hill Publish~ Co. of New York. The annual business meeting of the federation will be held Wednesday afternoon. More than 20 departmental sessions are listed for Tuesday. The most elab- orate programs will be held by depart- ment store interests organized as the Retail Advertisers, who will meet day Tuesday and Wednesday mornin the public utilities interests, the Agri- cultural Publishers’ Assocfution, the American Community Advertising As- sociation, Broadcast Advertisers, coun- try newspapers group, Direct Mail Ad- vertisers and the National Advertisers, combined ss the General Advertisers. The Federation of Women's Advertis- ing Clubs of the World will hold their sessions on Wednesday morning. Fior. Talking It Over With Henry Ford *If You Think Prohibition Is Forced on the American People, Let Politicians Try to Take It From Them.” BY A. M. SMITH. Special Dispatch to The Star. DETROIT, May 17.—~On the heels of the Nation-wide straw vote on enforce- ment, modification or repeal of the | th! eighteenth amendment, Henry Ford is more convinced than ever that pro- hibition is here to stay. “Prohibition is not an enactment, but a growth,” Mr. Ford said. “We made a start 10 years ago. The American peo- ple are not golnu back 10 years ago to undo what they did then. “They are going to let it grow for another decade or two, anyway. By that time it will have taken solid foot in American life and habit.” Mr. Ford believes there is far less booze and boozing in the country than there was five years ago. He is certa! the Federal Government 8 doing a good job of enforcement, and will do still better. He expects the country to be wholly dry some day; in fact, he says it is dry now so far as the people who really count are concerned. Two Classes Are Listed. “What about the well known leading citizens who take their cocktalls and highballs, in spite of the law?” he was asked. “Well known what?” he shot back. “You don't mean leading citizens, you mean tralling citizens, and not very well known at that. “In Detroit, as in every large center in this country, there are two classes of people—those who are bright with- out booze and those who think that booze brightens up their brains—the hten up and smarten up y flourishing & highball glass and gulp- less smart all the time. We are al —but don’t call them They are followers, and they don’t even know whom they are following most of the time. They probably imagine that they are following social custom, which shows that they are a trifie behind the times even on that point. The best [ soclety has snubbed booties booze as | a bounder. | l."lnogb worry about the to-uil'ug"-& o inkers, They very quiok! '.ho;uelvu down and out, and they don’t count, anyhow. “The people 0 be D. C., MAY 18 1930—PART ONE. WOMEN FLY HERE IN SIX PLANES Luther H. Reichelderfer. JOSEPHIS AHEAD | IN OREGON RACE ‘Log Cabin’ Candidate Leads Present Governor for G. 0. P. Nomination. By the Associated Press. who was born in a log cabin and once was a sheephearder, may win the Re- publican nomination for Governor of n, a5 a “vindication” candidate. George W. Joseph, the lawyer, whose rise from poverty to prominence has been marked by stormy controversies, culminating in a recent recommenda- tion of disbarment by fellow attorneys, was leading his nearest opponent in yesterday’s Republican primary race by almost 5,000 votes on the basis of latest returns. Reports from 1574 of the State's 1902 precincts tonight gave ! Joseph 47,035 votes. His nearest opponent, A. W. Norblad, the present governor, had 42,131. Harry Corbett was third with 31,329 and| ence M. Dart, president of the federa- tion, will preside. Other Group Meetings. ‘The following groups also will meet: The Advertising Commission, Advertis- ing Specialty Association, International Trade Conference, mflm group, Manufacturing Merec! lise Advertis- ing Association and the religious press department. e departmental session will be di- vided between the Willard and the ‘Washington Hotel. Another outstanding conference will | be on training for advertising, which will be conducted in two sessions on | Monday under the sponsorship of the Bureau of Research and Education of | the Advertsling Federation, of which | Nathaniel H. rnes is the director. The participating organizations in this conference will be the American Asso- | ciation of Advertising Agencies, Amer- | ican_Association of Collegiate Schools | of Business, Assoclation of National Advertisers, Financial Advertisers’ As- soclation, ~National Associations of Teachers and Marketing Advertising, National Industrial Advertisers’ Asso- ciation and the Public Utilities Adver- tising Association. John Beénson, pres- ident of the American Association of Advertising Agencies and director of the Advertising Federation, will preside. The purpose of this conference is for an exchange of views between employ- | ers of advertising personnel and busi- | ness school education on problems of major importance to beth. Advertis- ing employers will seek to arrive at an ideal educational background for men | entering advertising, while the edu- cators will disclose their aims in train. ing men for this business. All day Thursday will be given over to & conference on adv ing club management, which will be presided over by William R. Ewald of Detrolt, vice president of the federation. about are the millions of hard-working men with families who ean’t use booze and hold their jobs and do right by their families. And I am certain that is class of people in this country sre not using one-tenth the boose they for- merly did. Workers and Prohibition. “And don't you be fooled by the talk that the workingman resents prohibi- tion because it lets the rich man drink and keeps the poor man dry. “The Ameri¢an workingman knows that évery boss who tuns a real business is dry. The workingman knows that a ‘wet’ shop has less business, more ac- cidents and lower wages than a ‘dry’ shop. Prohibition could not last five minutes unless the great majority of American workingmen were for it. “The other day two shop men were arguing. One said: ‘Since prohibition I have turned my MNquor into furni- ture. T own something now.’ “Yet to listen to the propaganda you would think the workingman is moron when it comes to this question. The workingman is not anxious to turn his sons into saloon-fodder, as we used to do in this country. We are not going back to that for the simple reason that you oould’ never induce the people to go back. Credited to the People. ibition on & reluctant, ‘wfi; officialdom. And the greater part of officialdom is still ‘wet’ at heart, but g?n.;ehd to appear dry by the compulsion . le. Lh:"A:“ think pro‘)'ubll:thn is forced on erican s ticians 1o take 17 from . Lo - “From the President down it would soon be apparent whether prohibition gr::x from the people or was opposed em. ““The results of the straw votes and the kind of ‘wet’ nda ab; the land indicate tha oppo- sition to prohibition is in its last gasp.” Copyright, 1830, (Copyrisht. 1630, by Morth American News- PORTLAND, Oreg., May 17.—A lawyer | 2 J. E Charles Hall, fourth, with 6. J. E. ‘The Bennett and John A. Jeffry trailed. remaining precincts were expected to increase the incumbent’s vote, but not enough to give him the nomination. Among the candidates for the Demo- cratic gubernatorial nomination, Edward F. Bailey was leading by a margin of 854 votes over George R. Wilbur, who had’ unofficially, 8,411 votes from 1,406 precincts. Edward 8. Piper was third with 3, with 2,488. Hough ran as an avowed “wet.” How his platform affected his vote has not been determined. Franklin F. Korell, Representative from the third district (Multnomah County, in which Portlane was more than two to one ahead of his nearest opponent in his zace for re- nomination by the ns. R: R. 3 from the awley, Re- 22 {omers Cus Gave Can $40 © $90 These Fi“‘e Suitess $135 3-Pc. Bed-Davenport Suites ‘95 $185 3-Pc. Bed-Davenport Suites Upholstered in jacquard velour. Loose spring- filled cushions. Most attractive designs, covered all over in choice jac- quard velour...... 100-1b. Capacity 2-Door REFRIGERATOR Large t o 19.50 icer style P Well insu- lated. ALL - EAYER - FELT MATTRESS, § 75 art ticking..... 7 GATE-LEG T%BLE, mga(-, hogany finish. i FI1BER FERNERIES, choice of several colors: hand- $2_7s WOVen.....onne KITCHEN CABINET, white enamel or oak finish....... $24 and A. C. Hough, fourth, | d is located), | Flying in six planes, led by Miss Amelia Earhart, famous woman pilot. 35 members of the Philadelphia Women’s Advertising Club flew here yesterday afiernoon from Philadelphia to atlend a national advertising convention here this week. The photograph, made upon arrival of the planes at Bolling Field, shows, left te right: C. C. Younggreen, presi- dent of the Advertising Federation of America; Mayor Harry A. Mackey of Philadelphia, Miss Earhart and Commissioner —Star Staff Photo. publican of the first district, sought renomination unopposed. Senator Charles McNary, Republican, was unopposed for renomination and Elton Watkins was the only candidate for the Democratic nomination. Both had good votes. The campaign lacked issues and, except for Joseph's race, interest. . Actress Finds Walker Modest. NEW YORK, May 17 (®).—Betty Compton, actress, back from Bermuda, thinks that Mayor Walker is modest. | She ran into him on the links there and they had a match. Told that he | thought his game was poor, she pro- | tested that he really played very well. Asked whether she beat him, she said the aquarium and the ‘were beautiful. caves RAINS TEST SCOUT CONTEST CAMPERS 1,000 Boys to Be Judged in Eliminations for July Jamboree. Scattered rains last night tested the mettle and skill of nearly 1,000 Boy Scouts of the District Council, who staked out their pup tents yesterday afternoon in five camping grounds near Washington and spent the night under th‘ln the course of an elimination contest between troops for camp and Scout-craft honors. Early yesterday afternoon the Scouts assembled for five divisional “campo- rzes” in as many wooded sectlons of the vicinity. They will break camp at 8 o'clock this morning. ‘The troops will be judged uj way in which they utilize their camp sites, safety and sanitary Yrec;uuom. ne‘:meu, morale and handling of de- talls. The first division of Scouts from the northwest section pitched their tents in Randle Highlands under leadership of Deputy Commissioner E. C. Hlmm’ ‘The third division, recruited from areas west of Rock Creek Park, camped in Braemer Forest, and ‘were led by Deputy Commissioner Lester G. Wilson. Deputy Commissioner Charles A. Bell was in charge of the fourth division, comprising Scouts from outlying north- west districts, at Burnt Mills, Md. Scouts from the Virginia area cam near Cherrydale and those from the Maryland area at University Park, un- der supervision of Assistant Scout Ex- ecutive Willlam L. Leitch and Henry R. Coates, respectively. ‘Three or four leading patrols from each division will compete in the Dis- trict finals in Braemer Forest, June 7 and 8, and out of this competition one ?ltrol will be selected to represent the ocal council at the Four-States Re- gional Jamboree to be held late in June, the place to be announced later. JUBILEE TO BE OBSERVED Mecca Temple, No. 10, of the colored Shriners, will observe Jubilee day, May 25, at 7:30 p.m. at the New Masonic Temple, Tenth and U streets, when Caesar R. Blake, jr., imperial po- tentate, will be the principal speaker. A banquet will be tendered the im- perial potentate ,May 26, prior to the ;e[ullr meeting ‘of the lodge on that late. n the (22) Bed Davenport SUITES Reduced! A manufacturer’s clearance of short quantities makes this offering possible. Only 22 suites—for that was all that could be bought at these dras- tic price concessions. To- morrow they go on sale and the first 22 persons that come in our store will get them. $225 3-Pc. Bed-Davenport Suites Covered in mohair of good quality. of cushions of moquette in rich colorings Reverse 169 $285 3.Pc. Davenport Suites Newest Tuxedo de- =50 mohair. cushions in NURSERY FURNITURE At Almost 145 price Bassinettes—Cribs—Chests of Drawers in ivory, green and other shades of enamel finishes. Excel. lently made. $7.50 Bassinette, in greoen enamel. $3.50 5655 $8.50 $12.50 Bassinette, ivory decorated.. $18 Cribs, ivofy decorated........ $19 Chests of Drawers, green or ivory 39.95 enamel.......... $24 Ch green or ivory decorated..... $19 Cribs, ivory or green deco- rated.......00 of Drawers, Brass rail trim. Covered all over in rich Reverse of 195 frieze i FIBER ROCKERS Beautiful s in od and an attrac- ———3 tive assort- ment of colors UNPAINTED CHAIRS, for the breakfast room. Sturdy and well braced. sivs $1‘10 STEEL FRAME LAWN BENCH, 4-it, size painted s3_m ErEEN. ..o vaisind MAPLE PORCH ROCK- ERS, rattan SI_M seat, slat back. DOUBLE DAY:BED COUCH, cre- 39_95 tonne pad...... 905-907 7th St. N.W.

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