Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1930. T~ very Essential! Low Priced-- % pear on Bills Rendered July 1st Here’s a Remarkable Saving! Fine Picot Top rrivé for the Holiday Rports Silks, Panama Toyos and Felts of timel” We held our breath fon e holiday, The most charming b\lwhen you see them, and want Natural Tan Red Navy Black Green White [ Fioor. The New Tapestry Bags Very Specially Priced —Light-weight colorful bags to carry with Sum- mer costumes. Gate, simulated shell, single and triple frame styles of lovely tapestry fabrics in gay colors and striking designs. Each bag neatly lined and fitted with inside purse and mirror. Kann's—Street Floor. Sample Necklaces —A collection of necklaces that is fust one de- lightful surprise after another. New-styles. . -new colors...all lengths...samples...therefore just one or two of a kind! Which means early shop- ping is advisable. Kann's—Street Floor. First Time in Washington at This Low Price! Silk Shantung Frocks 32 For Misses and Women —This season the shantung frock is leading in the sports style race. They are inexpensive, cool and decidedly smart. The new pastel shades are one of the attractions . . . maize, orchid, blue, nile and flesh color, also white . . . with capelet sleeves, or sleeveless; sports necklines and pleated skirts, Kann's—8Second Floor, Chitfon Hose With Hemstitched Run Stbp! Full / Fashioned f2ér. —Imagine buying hoslery of the finest grade silk— all-silkgfrom top to toe—at a price like this! What is more—they have picot tops, French heels and a guaranteed hemstitched run stop which stops all runs starting above! , —We bought a manufacturer’s surplus stock! That's the reason for this remarkable saving! All the best shades are included. Beige Clair Ivorie Plage Muscadine Light Gun Metal White Sunbask Sable Rosador Six Savings in Notions 10c ONT Cotton, 85¢c dos. —Clark’s 250-yara spools. ite—Nos. 40 to 100, DlackNow, 40 to"" 10, Earl Dress Shields 2 pra., 36c —Guaranteed. Our own brand. 39c Kotex, 3 boxes, 85¢c —sal.uble Sanitary Napkins. One dozen in a box. 80c Sanitary Goods 3 for $1.00 —Choice of aprons, step-ins, belts, skirts, bloomers and 2-inch garter belts. 1 Cedarised Boxes, 79¢ __‘zsxmu 1 -inch boxes; covered with cretonne. Sample Sale of Costume Slips Silhouettes or Tailored Styles $1.79 Heavy Flat Crepe Rayon Crepe Crepe de Chine —A manufacturer’s gample line and dis- continued styles, including lace trimmed and tailored models—with shadow or tailor- ed hems. White and gntel colors. Misses’ and women's sizes. xtra sizes of rayon crepe. ing Combination, §0¢c —I;I:x’ll;l;.r'nlbl.cmpw'd and muslin cover. 10c Wash Cloths, 85¢ dos. —Assorted eelors—good size. Kann's—Street Floor. Special Sale Neckwear 39¢ —New lace neckwear, includ- ing collar and cuff sets, Bertha collars, tie collars, and sweetheart collars with Jsbot, that ordinarily sell st 79c and $1.00. Kann's—8treet Floor. Smart New Rayon Berets = 30c —A bright colored array of rayon berets—the most popu- lar sports hat of the season. Plain and combination color- Kann's—8econd Floor. Web-Foot All-Wool Bathing Suits Kann's—8treet Floor. ?n:.p].c!k nul_’]wool lsul“"' lg . ade, jockey, ue—plain ani Initialed Linen cts. 3¢ to 48 sizes. Handkerchiefs 35¢ ea. Three for $1.00 —Dainty solid eolor linen hlfldke‘ryehlefl, with hand- Sports Jackets, $5.95 appliqued white linen initial —An_assortment of sports jackets offers smart and'nand-olied bema. flannel, velveteen, flat crepe, and jersey models, 8 ~—Novelly Linen and Cotton number are attractively embroidered; in light Handkerchiefs, 10c ea., 6 for 59¢c shades and black. Sizes 14 to 42, Kann's—Street Floor. =Cool, Dainty, Dotted Swiss Blouses, wpecialiy priced $1.00 Kann's—8econd Floor, e —— Sale—Trimmed Rayon Undergarments 88¢ Chemise Combinations Btep-ins Pajamas —Dainty garments of heavy delustered rayon in pastel colors and regular sizes. med with appliques or laces. —Chemise, Bloomers, Step-ins and Panties, also In extra sizes. Delustered Rayok Garments—69c Chemise, Combinations, Vests, Bloomers, Step-ins, Panties. Non-Run Rayon Garments—S55c; 2 for $1 Chemise, Bloomers, Vests and Panties— new styles. Kann's—Street Floor. j Service Commission, 1 B Miss Jeanne Durand, clerk in C cago, Ills. She made a leap of 18,7 feet, from plane over Minneapolis, which is believed to be a world's record for women, —P. & A. Photo. TRIO OF FLYERS DIE | IN BLAZING PLANE Woman and Two Men Seared Al-| most Beyond Recognition When Found After Crash. By the Associated Pres | TULSA, Okla, May 27.—Crashing as the pilot was landing on the lighted Garland Airport, an airplane carrying Miss Ursa Ball, 28, of Tulsa, and Robert Hammond, 21, and George S. Busboom, both of Cathage, Mo., fell 50 feet here last night and burned, killing the trio, Bodies of the victims were seared beyond recognition. A half hour was required to extricate them from the smoldering wreckage. Friends of the three persons who had accompanied them to the fleld for the night fiight witnessed the accident. Busboom, a marble quarry owner, pro- prietor of the plane, and Hammond, his pilot, accompanied by E. J. Peters, Tulsa marble dealer, flew here this afternoon from Carthage. The ship was left at the fleld for some minor repair work. About 11 o'clock, Busboom and Ham- mond, accompanied by several friends, returned to the fleld and had the motor warmed up for night flight above Tulsa. Attendants at the airport said the plane, after flying low over the city, returned above the fleld, dipped as if to land, and then zoomed over a hangar before falling. The reason for the crash was unknown, Two student flyers, both of Tulsa, also were injured yesterday in a fall near here. Paul Van Pelt suffered a broken back and other injuries and A, M. Hicks was less seriously hurt when their ship crl.:hed from an altitude of about 250 feet. FEDERAL JOBS OPEN Guidance and Placement Oficers and Attorney Are Needed. ‘The Civil Service Commission an- nounces the following open competitive examinations: Guidance and placement officer, $3,800 0 $4,400 a year; associate guidance and placement officer, $3200 to $3,700 & | B year; assistant guidance and placement officer, $2,600 to $3,100 a year; Indian Field Service. Associate marketing specialist (wool), $3,200 to $3,700 a year; Bureau of Agri- cultural Economic: Senlor attorney, $4,600 a year; attor- ney, $3800 a year; Interstate Com- merce Commission. | Full information and application blanks may be obtained from the Civil 4 F street. COWGIRL IS WOUNDED Walks Into Marksman’s Fire at! Rodeo Exhibition. WOODBURY, N. J., Mrs. May Stanley, 35, of Chicago, a cowgirl with a rodeo playing at Almoe nesson Park, near here, was accidently shot by a cowboy in the presence of seve eral hundred children at a performance yesterday. She was wounded critically. The cowhoy was giving an exhibition of marksmanship, firing at a target with A .22-caliber rifle. Mrs. Stanley walked (x;ogl her tent accidentally into the line of fire. A bullet penetrated her right breast and may have pierced the lung. City Upholstering Co. Spey Rate on U Istering Making ol: furniture like new Refinishing Slip_Covers 2106 18th Dec. 2668 OPEN EVENINGS SAVAGE | WASHER & DRYER EXCLUSIVE SPIN-RINSE, SPIN-DRY HUGHES SCORES SHARP PRACTICE | Expresses Belief Aid of Law- yers Is Needed to Free Bar From Disrepute. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 27.—Chlef Jus- | tice Charles Evans Hughes belleves that the aid of lawyers ih keeping the bar free from disrepute is needed now more than ever. He expressed the be- |lief in a letter read yesterday at the dedication of a new home for the New York County Lawyers' Association. “Attempts to thwart the administra- | tion of justice by delays, sharp prac- tice and chicanery,” the fetter said, should be ‘“unsparingly condemned. They have no Elare in a profession where skill and honor should g0 hand in hand.” “Even when purged, as it should be, of 1ts deun%uemc. the bar is only at the threshold of its opportunity to de- Yote its technical knowledge to the ef- fort to adjust the mechanism of Justice to the demands of a complex society to Which old methods in many respects are unsuited,” the letter continued. “While improvement in this direc- tlon is necessavily slow, bar associations may immediately perform a great serv- ice in strongly insisting on the selec- tion of capable prosecutors, magistrates and jud HUMAN SACR‘IFICES LAID TO MAYANS BY EXPLORER Positive Evidence Found in Skull- Decorated Temple, Ameri- can Abserts. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, Ohio, May 27.—Posi- tive evidence that the Mayans, who occupled parts of Mexico prior to the Invasions of the Spanish, offered hu- man_sacrifices, has been disclosed at the Temple of the Kings at Chichen Itza, Theodore A. Willard, former Cleveland storage battery manufacturer, reported here yesterday. Willard was ‘back after his twelfth expedition to Yucatan, where he studied the excavated temple and its contents, The temple occupies 7,000 square feet, Its wall are decorated with human skulls. Knives for the sacrificial cere- monies were found, as well as g ro'unded stone, believed used as an altar. ARMY MEN TRANSFERRED Capt. Charlebols, at San Francisco, Is Ordered Home to Retire. Col. Willlam A. Castle, Infantry, at Fort Sam Houston, Tex., has been or- dered to examination for retirement; Maj. P. H. Coleman, Air Corps, has been transferred from the Provin, Ground, Aberdeen, Wright Fiel Dayton, Ohio; Maj. F. R. McLean, In- fantry, from Hawall to New York City; Maj. J. W. F. Allen, Infantry, from Fort Creighton University, O Kansas City, Ka nolds, Air Co: . F. W. Hunter, R. K. . Tyng, Medical , from Brooklyn, N.'Y,, to the War Depart- ment; Maj. W. K. r_at Fort anks, M; and Maj, Clide P. Mueller, at the War artment, to Brooklyn, N. ¥,; Capt. L. D. Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind., University of Akron, Ohio; Capt. C. E. Hutchin, Infantry, from Vancouver Barracks, Wash, to Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Towa; First Lieut. Roland K. Charles, jr., Medical Reserves, has bee éppemuni {lr!tAnl:&ubenldnl. B orps, Regular , and assigned to duty at Fort Bragg, N. C., and Capt, C L. Charlebols, Quartermaster Corps, at San Francisco, has been ordered to his home for retirement. CONSULAR CHANGES Dunn of Protocel Division Will Go to London. Recent changes in the United States Foreign Service, announced at the State Department include the transfer of James C. Dunn of New York, chief of the protocol division at the State De- partment, to London, as first secretary of the United States embassy to Eng- land; the transfer of Ralph A. Boern- stein of Washington, consul, from Malmo, Sweden, to Naples, Italy; the transfer of Edward A. Dow of Nebraska, consul, from Frankfort-oh-the-Main, Germany, to St. John's, Newfoundland, and the transfer of H. L. Hartley of Massachusetts, vice consul, from the State Department to Buenos Adires, Argentina. FLORIDA GAIN IS LARGE Census Bureau Indicates State May Win New Representative. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., May 27 (#).— Complete census returns from 48 Florids | counties and 27 municipalities yesterday | showed a population of 1,231,073. In 1920 the entire population of the State was 968,470. The Census Bureau at Washington said indications were that Florida would gain an extra Representative, bringing the number to five, oy E.r “ The sea covers three-fourths of the earth’s surface, or a total area of about 145,000,000 sq mile! Sifi $.qgestions fo » The Graduate For Her Handbags Gloves Fitted Cases Travel Clocks Umbrellas Boudoir Lamps Cigarette Cases Kodaks Diaries Picture Frames Music Cases For Hin Billfolds Gloves Dreesing Cases Belts & Buckles Brush Sets Typewr;teu Lighters Tobacco Pouches Pullman Slippers Collar Cases Brief Cases Wardrobe Trunks Tourobes BEKERS 1314 F Street N.W. &ifts of Leather are Certain to be Appreciated