Evening Star Newspaper, June 8, 1930, Page 18

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B2 " = N ‘1. . OFFICES MAKE - EXTENSIVEMOVES s gb'rinsfer of Offices to Rev- ;? enue Building Results in : General Shuffle. s #* A new shuffie in the housing of *ifarfous activities of the Federal Gov- Jernment is now under way, in keep- «ing with the prégram of occupying -the new Bureau of Internal Revenue, :-t Tenth and B streets, and providing oJor beautification of the public domain <there. ¥° The Walker-Johnson Building on New York avenue, near Eighteenth _#treet, 15 now practically empty, as a result of the evacuation of Internal ¢ Revenue units into their new home. Into this building, about June 16, will move the general staff of the Army and its various divisions, with the ex- ception of the chief of staff and his aides. The war plans sections, housed in the Barr Building, 910 Seventeenth i#treet,” will move into the Walker- Johnson Building. Into the same building, also, will ~move the personnel of the inspector general, the judge advocate general and the chief of chaplains of the Army. ‘The Federal Reserve Board will be moved from the Otis Building, near Eighteenth and H _streets, to Treas- ury annex No. 1, The Bureau of Pub- “lic Roads will move from 1418-20 ~Pennsylvania avenue to 1300 E street. Radio Offices to Press Club. ‘The Federal Radio Commission, now in the Interior Department Building, and the radio division of the Depart- ment of Commerce, which is slso housed shere, will be moved, about July 1, to uarters being vacated tonight by gthe Bureau of Internal Revenue, in the National Press Club Buil . The Bureau of Home Economics of the De- spartment of Agriculture will move from the Government Hotels in Union Sta- -tion Plaza into the Earle Building, at ‘Thirteenth and E streets, about the be- ginning of the coming fiscal year. < The anized Reserves are to, move from the Oxford Hotel, at Fifteenth and Pennsylvania .avenue, to the Walker- Johnson Building. The supervising architect’s office of the Treasury De- gsn.ment will move from the Albee utlding at PFifteenth and G streets to 1300 E_street. ‘The transfer tonight, when workmen moving furniture and equipment the Internal Revenue Bureau out of the National Press Building will take it 1,200 more. Move Postponed. It had been planned to start ove last night, but on account of c congestion on the streets Sunday | Prie t, it was agreed to postpone the is | Third street address and Tow qua d E streets in a buliding to be torn "'to_make way for a park. Into nex No. 1 also will be moved the lict of the Treasury, who is now in ‘alker-Johnson Building. Collector to Move. £ Out of the triangle of buildings along ylvania avenue to be torn down park also will be moved the mfly collector of internal revenue receives Federal taxes from Wash- {ngtonians. He is now stationed at 1422 Pennsyl- P Depavwmta: ot Agricult Hvitl ure activities :‘%nmgvem out of the @ire scheduled ‘old uilding on the Mall tion buflding, near o ‘entymology and insectory sections, %0 ihe "old - administration buflding, ‘whith is to be toln down under the beautification program, are to be moved 2s are 1304-6 B street southwest, 1316 B street sowthwest, 210 Eleventh street iculture. ARCHITECTS TO DINE. 'ederal Association to Celebrate Com- pletion of Agricultural Bullding. ‘The Association of Federal Archi- in conjunction with the Washing- n Chapter of the American Institute f Architects will hold a dinner in e patio of the new Agricultural Ad- istration Building next Thursday the first of the buildings in the vernment program to be completed is to be the first occasion t this building will be illuminated teriorly and exteriorly. ' ‘This project is interesting not only fhe first completed struc- e devel the desire that was in the minds of lore Roosevelt and former Sec- tary of Agriculture Wilson, that these 'wo end pavilions would one day be nited. by & monumental center por- n. There are many unusual lighting ef- ects which lend to make this build- g of more than ordinary interest. the most eff.ective 18 of the Mall facade from-a faint low to a full flood of light to bring ;Ltha whole structure as in day- FALL PROVES FATAL ‘aiter Dies After Tumble From Hotel Vegetable Hampers ‘Marco Bognot, 70 years old, of 1309 street, & walter at the Mayflower 1, died early last night after a fall rom a vegetable hamper in the kitchen { the hotel where he worked. Bognot had been complaining for #bout two hours of being sick, police ay, before he fell, striking his head on e floor. His body was removed to the istrict morgue, where it is being held or_relatives. Police believe Bognot's death was due » heart attack, which caused him to from the hamper. Coroner J. Ram: Nevitt will investigate the 1!\1:— NEGRO ART ON “BIG SHOT" ESCAPES POLICE RAID SQUAD Disappears After Boasting to Be “Biggest Boot- legger.” A self-confessed “master bootlegger” whose ideas on diplomacy obviously lacked stability under weight of test, nabbed the apotlight of mnotoriety for the raiding activity of police vice squads yesterday, which culminated 1fi the seisure of nearly 500 quarts of al- leged liquor and the arrest of six per- sons. Police failed to “nab” the “liquor king,’ however, when he made a sensational fence-scaling feat to fore- sake the spotlight of their surveillance. The “big shot” of the bootleg racket | interrupted a raid on a premises in the 1100 block of Third street north- east, withuthe query, “Where's the pro- tor? “Qh, he's around somewhere,” Wwas 1t officer’s reply. “Who are you?” An_air of hauteur befet the man. “Oh, me,” quoth he. “Why I'm one of biggest bootleggers in this little old to of yours, The proprietor here At this for me!” nno}oxgenluontl la:zl:nt. when the arm of the law was en- ing its tendons to pluck from the Seid of this illegal et one whose sclf and utter lack of diplomacy had been warrant enough for police action, the official eenv;y‘;tn:le g! the Metropolitan Police De) ent was shunting backwards toward the frofiv of the house. The ‘“master liquor baron” lost his dignity and the police thereat also lost the “baron.” His coat tails were l’n seen as he scrambled over & rear fence. Police succeeded in arresting Sally Jones, colored, 24 years old, and Edward Pongee, colored, 26 years old, at the charged d maintaining a nui- of alleged liquor were Lee, colored, 38 years old, of the 1300 block of I street southeast, was arrested when police seized 408 arts of alleged liquor on her premises. jhe was charged with possession. The squad next visited a house in the first block of G street. James Spriggs, colored, 29 years old, gave police a chase | of three blocks before he was captured | and charged with sale, possession and creating a nuisance. Thirty-six quarts of liquor (were seized. Mary Agnes Anderson, 35, and Harry Nuckols, 40, were arrested in a raid on premises in the 400 block of Tenth street flon'l}:lsl. ‘The !o;mer :xvnu charged with possession and creating am ce and the latter with sale and posseasion. woman was in the act of filling bottles with liquor when the police arrived, they said. ‘Two quarts of liquor were confiscated at & house in the 300 block of C treet southwest. No one was arrested. Two_hundred bottles of beer were selzed by Detective Rupert McNeill and Policeman Spotswood F. Gravely in a rald on Zfilfly;emuy"lnh avenue last night. Pranl with possession an sance. Two quarts seized. k Smith, 36 years old, who lives at that address, was arrested on charges of sale and possession of the traband. con : Four ns were arrested in a series of liquor ralds by police last night and a fifth made his escape when he applied smoke screen and put Policeman D. Milstead of the eleventh precinct out of & chase on Benning road. Milstead gave chase to & suspected rum car early last night on Benning road and trailed the machine for about & mile. At Benning Bridge the pursued car let out a cloud of smoke that forced the officer to stop. Police of the second precinct seized 42 pints of alleged liquor in a raid at 207 Brooks court and took in custody Catherine Guy, colored, on charges of sale and possession. She was released in $1,500 bond. Second precinct police in another raid arrested Mary Williams, colored, 1310 Fifth street, on charges of sale and possession. Ninth precinct police, in two ralds, arrested Bertha A colored, 717 Pickford place northeast, and Rosie Johnson, ' colored, 213 Warren street northeast, -— CHILD, 4, IS INJURED IN SUDDEN CAR STOP Mother Throws on Brakes to Avoid Crash, Hurling Him Into * ‘Windshield. Chadwick Howard Leyshorn, 4 years old, of 9419 BSecond avenue, North Woodside, Md., was cut about the head and hands last night when thrown into the windshield of his mother’s car as she applied the brakes to avold a col- lision with snother machine at Four- teenth street and New York avenue. Mrs. Leyshorn was driving north on Fourteenth street when an automobile ahead of;;rq s md‘dlznl and she was f to jam on her to avert a collision, Traffic Officer P. J. Jordon drove Mrs. Leyshorn’s car to the Emergency Hospital, where the injured youn, was given first aid treatment and dismissed. WEIGHS POUND AND OUNCE Special Dispatch to The Star. RICHMOND, Va., June 7.—Mr. and Mrs. Wil A, Hamby have a three- day old baby girl that weighted 1 und and 1 ounce at birth. The baby normal. The father is feeding her with a medicine dropper and is construct- | 1 ing a box of incubator variety to keep her warm, THE SUNDAY EXHIBITION AT NATIONAL GALLERY Above: “Plantation Scene,” by C. A. Robinson. Long?” by Horace G. Anderson. Below: “Oh, Lord! How —S8tar Staff Photos. CATHOLICTEACHER 10 BE BEATIFIED Founders of Order of Teach- ing Nuns Will Be Given Pope’s Blessing. By the Associated Press. . VATICAN = CITY, June 9.—The venerable Paola Frassinetti, founder of the order of teaching nuns of St. Dorothy and one of the principal protagonists of the cause of Catholic education of women and girls during the nineteenth century, both in Italy and America, will be solemnly beatified tomorrow in moving and picturesque ceremonies in St. Peter's. Her elevation “to the honors of the altar,” as the process of beatification is commonly called, ushers in the grandiose series of public recognitions of lives dedlicated to the service of the Catholic Church, which mark-the entire month of June. The feats will be brought t¢ a climax on Sunday, June 29, the day of Saints Peter and Paul, when the eight Canadian martyrs who suffered death at the hands of the Indians in the first half of the seventeenth century, will be proclaimed saints of the church, the first from the N American Continent. The holy woman, whose portrait will be exposed in St. Peter's tomorrow and who will henceforth be known as Blessed Paola Frassinetti, died in Rome in 1882, in the convent she founded near St. Onofrio on the Janiculum Hill. Sister of a priest almost as renowed as herself, she devoted her life to the educational betterment of her sex. The nuns whom she trained soon enlarged their activities from the Italian field, inaugurating other houses, notably in the United States and Canada. Pope Plus will descend from his private apartments in the Vatican into St. Peter's in the late afternoon to venerate the relics and picture of Blessed Paola. After his genuflection before them he will remain in prayer for some minutes, and then preside over a solemn thanksgiving service, at the close of which he will impart his benediction. In the evenings the cupola and facade of St. Peter’s will be lit up with thousands of festooned lights, ;x;mxe from almost every quarter of me. HARVARD EXPLORER, R. F. STARR, WEDS Bride ~ Authority on Semitic Tongues — Couple to Leave Bhortly for Mesopotamia, By the Associated Press. > EASTON, Md., June 7.—Richard Prancis Starr, director of the Harvard expedition to Mesopotamia, and Miss Dorothy Clark Simpson of Chicago were married here today. Mr. and Mrs, Starr will spend their honeymoon at Hope House, the estate of Mr. Starr's mother, near here. In September he plans to return to Meso- potamia, accompanied by his bride. The Harvard expedition is making excava- tions there in the interest of the Fogg Museum. The bride is an suthority on semitic languages. Only relatives were 8t the ceremony at the dist Protestan! it Church, Gasoline Hand Bath Develops Flames as Spark Is Produced A lguk struck in some way while he was washing his hands in gasoline in the kitchen sink at his home, 3645 Veazey street, ignited the fuel and seriously burned the hands of Licut. James C. Cluck last night. Lieut. Cluck is stationed at the Army Indus- trial College here. Cluck was removing grease from his hands and believes a ring, set with a jewel, struck against a portion of the sink, » spark in igniting the He refused hospital treat- 3 to the kitchen was estimated by fourteenth pre- cinct police at $5. ASK ALCORN MEMORIAL Post Office Employe Suggests Con- tribution by Federal Workers. A proposal that, in appreciation of “the tireless efforts and crowning glory of the laudable work of Robert H. Al- corn, which has recently culminated in the signing by President Hoover of the Dale-Lehlbach retirement bill,” Gov- ernment_workers contribute a testimo- nial to Mr. Alcorn, has been made by H. G, Malcolm, an employe of the Di- vision of Equipment and Supplies, in the city post office building, in a letter to Representativée Ernest W. Gibson of Vermont, a member of the House civil service committee. In reply Mr. Gibson said: “No doubt your postmaster,. Mr. Mooney, would be glad to permit such |ed a collection to be taken in the city post office and I suggest you take the matter up with him. When the cit~ post of- fice employes have collected contri- butions for Mr. Alcorn, I think the ball will have started rolling so that sther branches of the Government will follow suit. It is my judgment that Mr. Alcorn deserves such a testimonial of respect for his services.” Your “front-porch Campaign’ STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JUNE 8, COLORED ARTISTS IN EXHIBITION HERE Paintings and Sculpture Shown in Connection With Harmon Awards. BY LEILA MECHLIN. An exhibition of Paintings by Ameri- can colored artists is now on view in the United States National Museum, Tenth and B streets. This exhibition was arranged in connection with the William E. Harmon awards. As an out- growth of the award in fine arts, and is the third of the sort which has been sent out. It is shown here under the auspices of the committee on race rela- tions of the Washington Federation of Churches, and is eminently worthy of attention. Its purpose is to acquaint and interest the public more generally in the creative accomplishments of the Negro race in the fine arts, and it is hoped by those who are responsible for it ‘that it will not only achieve this end but also encourage creative expres. sion of a high order. The exhibition was first shown In International House, New York, in January d has since been exhibited in other leading cities. It consists of paintings in oil, draw- ings, prints, water colors, and two or more works in sculpture, and includes the works to which awards were made at the opening showing. An exhibition of a similar sort, under the same aus- ices, was shown in the Natlonal Gal- lery of Art last year at about this same time. That exhibition contained more works in black and white and sculpture and fewer paintings in oll. On the one hand, the present exhibition is more im- pressive for this fact, but on the other hand there were included in the previous showing certain illustrative drawings absent this time, which attained to a very high standard. ‘The award of ]!lold medal this year was made to Willlam H: Johnson of New York City, who shows two land- scapes and two portraits in olls, painted in modernistic manner, strong and ex- tremely \l.l;;m A Ze were awarded to Albert Alexander Smith of New York City, who exhibits figure compositions rendered in a manner essentially orig- inal; and to Sargent Johnson of Berk- eley, Calif., who exhibits works in sev- eral mediums, among them' two notably :lnl;e“w::‘kuién "fi?'fl'," done with al- imitive s city, yet with re- finement of uellng.p L P Notwithstanding the decision of the gmm:‘ ofi& awards there is ong exhibiting artists who displays such artistic feeling and real comprehension of artistic values as Laura Wheeler Waring, whose portrait, studies in ofls are fine in color and are rendered with breadth, sympathy and skill, as well as with certain charm. Laura Wheeler Waring some years ago achieved success as an illus- trator working in black and white, and the portrait studies shown in this ex- hibition evidence the development of an unusual talent. There is strength and virilit; in the paintings of Hale A. Woodruft- Y, Wi Henry B. “Jone-ml': “The Voodoo Tree” gr‘:un an resting - tion which Sompanl has subjective ice and pictorial worth. Not. m com| ting well , but With evident deep }’e';'fi‘,;.. mehn Al R. Freelon, who is and opportunities gen- erally, presented by & paintin entitled “Icing the Boats’ and by E number of admirable works in biack and white, among which mention should be made of “The Market ;’l‘im and “Elverson Building— ght.” 4 King Daniel Ganaway is repre- sented by two very beautiful pictorial plwtn(ngha, Hfihfly included in a fine arts tion use of their excep- tional _;u “The Gardener's Cart” and Spirit of Transportation,” - 's ly entitled “The Civil War Veterans” is academically good, and much can be said in praise of Horace Y. Anderson's “Nodding by the Fire” and “Dreaming of Dixle,” which are not only well painted, but have atmosphere, inward significance. Included in the exhibition is one study of a nude from life—"Ande,” by Louis M. Jones, beautifully drawn. ——— Social Science Research Council List Inoludes Woman—Many States Represented. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 7.—Awards of 24 new fellowships in agricultural econom- ics and rural sociology, made possible by a five-year grant of $150,000 to enable students to fit themselves for research through study at graduate schools in various sections of the country, were announced today by the Social Sclence Research Council. ‘The new fellows were chosen from 85 applicants representing practically all the states. One is a woman, Paulene Nickell of University Farm, St. Paul, Minn. Two of the fellows will work in Iowa, two in New York, two in Con- necticut, three in Minnesota and six in the U. 8. Department of Agriculture at Washington. Other states represent- are Tennessee, Ohlo, Kentucky, Alabama, Virginia, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Wyoming and Colorado. The average of the stipends is $1,416, the aggregate value being $34,000. ‘The fellowships are designed to stim- ively equ! wae ge_sum: of money available from Feceral azd other sources for research in agricul- tural economics and rural sociology. b against the heat is now begun . . so why not make this retreat as attractive as it is com- fortable . . “Murco” will help do that. Use “Murco” Lifelong Paint to help your porch withstand the “dog-days” ahead it cleaner, cooler, more desirable in every no superior for durability...plus! .to make way. ureo” has “Murco” i any ecolor or any quantity is 100% Pure. Ask our experts for suggestions. E. ]J. Murphy Cé., Inc. 710 12th St. N. W. National 2477 1920—PART ONE. U. S. Court Orders 20,000 Bottles of Liquor Destroyed Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va., June 7.— Federal prohibition agents recent- ly, will be destroyed in the near future at the order of the United States Court, which is concluding its session here. Order was entered in the court yesterday, returnable June 10, to show cause why the liquor, should not be destroyed. The cargo, which was captured April 24, is now stored in a Government warehouse in Washington and presumably will be poured out ere. The court also ordered the R. F. & P. Railway Co. to sell the bags of oyster shells, billed as chicken feed, found in the car. The railroad will obtain a portion of its freight charges from the sale of this material, which, it is understood, has been bought by a local fertilized com- pany. HOWELL WILL SEEK DRY BILL ACTION Author of Measure Will Again Ask Senate to Consider Legislation. Another effort ‘to have ‘the Senate take up the dry enforcement bill for the District will be made tomorrow, Senator Howell, Republican, of Ne- braska, author of the measure, an- nounced last night. The Senator tried to get the measurg up Friday afternoon, but after a brief debate between him- self and Senator Tydings, Democrat, of Maryland, the bill gave way to other business. . One of the features of the bill to which Senator Tydings has objected is the section which would impose a pen- alty on a person who knowingly permits any property under his control to be used in violation of the prohibition law without taking reasonable measures to Senator Towel et nator Howel ended this portion of his bill during the colloquy wx&o Sen- ator Tydings when the question was be- fore the Senate. The pill would extend prohibition enforcement authority to all local policemen, re-enact a part of the Sheppard law, which first made Wash- ington dry prior to national prohibition, and extend the search warrant author- ity of local officials. The \ BINGHAM ATTACKS U.S. WORK BUREAUS Wagner Employment Bill Is, Scored in Radio Address. By the Associated Press. Senator Bingham, Republican, of | Connecticut, in a radio address last| night attacked a bill pending in the| Senate intended to suthorize the estab- | lishment of a national system of em- ployment bureaus. Speaking over the National Broad- casting chain, the Senator said the bill seeks to have the States surrender a vital power of “self-government in ex- change for Federal appropriation, to accept Federal supervision and con- trol. His address was in reply to one made two weeks ago by Senator Wag- :!’l‘l’ Democrat, New York, author of the Senator Bingham asserted the meas- ure undertook to coerce the States into acceptance of the plan by threatening the establishment and maintenance of Federal employment agencies unless the State accepted the Federal policy. “This is a dangerous doctrine,” Sena- tor Bingham said. “I do not need to remind my radio audience that the War of the American Reyolution was fought as a protest against infliction of laws upon people who did not desire them, or upon communities where the ma- Jority of the people were not in favor e e ooutl lly t “We are continually trespassing upon the rights of the States and are cen- tralizing the authority that belongs to them in agencies of National Gov- ernment. It is not the business of ‘Washington to look out for the general welfare of the people, but for the gen- eral welfare of the States.” TWO DIE IN I;LANE CRASH Pilot and Passenger Victims in Chamber of Commerce Craft. CLINTON, Okla., June 7 (#).—Frank- lin D. Peters, Oklahoma City, pilot, and Stanley Paas, passenger, of Clinton, Okla., were killed late today when their plane, owned by the junior division of the Oklahoma City Chamber of Com- merce, crashed here today. The plane, flying at a low altitude, did a wing-over and slipped, falling be- tween two residences. license, took off with Paas Curtis-Wright flying fleld at Oklahoma City about 2 pm. The crash occurred two hours later. Peters, holder of a private flying from the RULINGBY WHERY) BLOCKS SUBPOENA Order Signed in Equity Wit Against Central Public Service Corporation. Chief Justice Wheat yesterday granted the motion of the Central Pub- lic Service Corporation of Chieago to quash the service of a subpoena Which had been made upon it by attempting to serve the treasurer of the Washing- ton Gaslight Co. on the claim that the Central Public Service Corporation was doing business in the District of '€o- lumbia through the Washington Gas- light Co. The order was signed in the sult in equity brought by George Bowie Chap- man, Washington broker, for an mc- counting against the corporation, Albert E. Plerce, its president and others, claiming $78,000 to be due him foreb- taining shares of gaslight company stock under a contract with Pierce to pay him $1 per share for ‘the stock transfer, The court also granted the motion of Harris Forbes & Co. and Frederick 5. Burroughs of New York to have the suit dismissed as to them, and also sustained the motion of Plerce that the plaintiff had no standing in equity. The court ordered that the case insofar as it affected Plerce should be transferted for trial before a jury in the law court. Attorneys Wilton J. Lambert, Dogier A. De Vane and R. H. Yeatman repre- sented the defendants while Attorneys A. B. Duvall and Frost and Towers ap- peared for Mr. Chapman. Indian Loses Life Appe‘nl, OKLAHOMA - CITY, June 7 (#).— Frank Ware, 24-year-old Osage Indian, the first man convicted for murder in Oklahoma in connection with a motor, car accident, resulting from driving while drunk, yesterday lost his fight to escape a life sentence in the State prison. ‘The Criminal Court of Appeals, hayv- ing afirmed his sentence two months ago, has denied Ware a rehearing. The Indian was convicted in Kay ‘County for the death October 2, 1928, of Carl Snodgrass. Riding a moter cycle along the Kaw City-Ponca City Highway about midnight, Snodgrass was run down by Ware, who said he had bor- rowed the car and bought a quart of whisky before leaving Pawhuska for a drive with a man and two women. Ladybirds, so useful in destroying greenfly and other pests in the garden, are being “farmed” in England. Underselling Specials in GOOD Furniture that are exactly as represented * MONDAY SPECIALS (See them tomorrow) UNPAINTED BREAK- FAST CHAIRS, bow backs .. . $l SMALL PORCH ROCK- ERS, Maple posts . . $1 '9‘0 STEEL FRAME LAWN BENCHES, 4 53.50 feet long KIMLARK & CREX RUGS, 36x72- $1.49 inch size e 50-LB. ALL-LAYER FELT M ATTRESSES, 56 .90 all sizes ... 3 - PC. BED OUTFIT, coil spring complete with $19.95 and felt mat- AREAgIRS ot KLARGE BUTTERFLY TABLES, 35x48 when open. oo §18.50 KEND TABLES, walnut or mahogany Sl DOUBLE DAY-BED with Windsor ends, coil spring, cretonne mat- .= $24.50 value FIBRE ROCKERS, up- holstered in' cretonne. As- sortment of col- 57.75 ors. $9.75 value.. KITCHEN CABINET, oak finish, porcelain sliding w0 $24.50 value Sva K BOUDOIR CHAIRS. loose cushions of cretonne in neat designs, $12.50 value ‘?‘.“. $8.50 KAPT. STYLE REFRIGER- ATORS, 100-b, i capacity, $27. value .. /7 DINETTE SUITE Regular $149 Value Very attractive two - tone Walnut finish with glass door corner cabinet—extension table —54-inch buffet—4 chairs with b Every item in this adv. that is marked with a star will be displayed in our windows Monday! It gives you a real idea of the savings before you even. enter our store. $124-50 jacquard seats, Excellent make. % SIMMONS BEAUTYREST DAVENPORT LOUNGE. All-steel frame with enclosed metal frame for bed linens. Richly upholstered in fig- A most comfortable bed as ured denim. ‘119 well as an attractive lounge............ Y RECLINING BACK RESTRITE CHAIR. able to your comfort. Upholstered in 3- tone jacquard. Complete with ottoman foot stool. Reg. $49.75 value...o.ouuina 3-PC. 4-PC. BEDROOM SUITE. Reg. $139 American walnut finish, Poster Bed. Vanity. Dresser and Chest....vusw value. Adjust 39 773 88 OVERSTUFFED LIVING ROOM SUITE. Regular $115 value. Jac- quard velour upholstery. Wood-trimmed me WRIGHT - 905-907 7th St. N.W.

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