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A—6 LEE ENTRY. WINS CULPEPER PLATE Enormous Crowd Witnesses Second Day’s Horse Show Program. Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. 1 CULPEPER, Va. July 5-—Another: enormous crowd witnessed the second day’s program of the Horse Show and Racing Association and applauded as honors were won by their favorites. Rock Arden, from the stables of Mrs. | . N. Lee, was awarded the Culpeper Challenge Plate, as being the best hunter in the show. Mrs, Lee's Broken Glass won this last year. In th2 eolor- ful Corinthian class Newsboy, who won first in ladies’ hunters, took a bad fall st the fourth jump, cutting his aee and stunning his rider. The Corley horses were again win- mers, and Miss Elizabeth Nesbit's Cathode Ray won first in a class of 33 entries in the free-for-all handicap. In the half-mile dash for local thorses, Pride of Glenmore came in first, but the judges sustained a claim of foul and gave first prize to Showboat. Races were all splendidly filled and weré run in spirited manner. Boston Boy, fine hunter of D. C. Weaver of Oulpeper, won first in steeplchase both today and yesterday. Exhibition Events. Summary of exhibition events: CLASS 13 Road Hacks, first to be shown at a walk. trot and hand gallop. then gver Jump—First. Dew Bank, Mrs D. N. Lee second. Cagorin. E. M. Woolf; third. Red Eagle, Woodside Stock Farms fourth bay selding. Miss Elizabeth Nesbit CLASS 15: 'Hunters. for Horses 4_vears 1d and under — . John Straw- second, G.' Rolte; three, | Ss Ladies' hunters. to be ridden by ladies and shown over jumps ot to ex- ceed 4 feet: conformation, performance and manners to count—First, Newsboy, D. B. Smith: _second Squiffy. Miss Edith® Nesbit: third. Cathode Ray. Miss Elizabeth Nesbit. CLASS 23: Jumping class. touch and out Jumps 4 feet. to_be raised in case of a tie: golv_one price—First. Lady Bulsaria. Frank orley. 8S 30: Corinthian: open to all hunt- ers: horses ridden in hunting colors. in_and out 21 feet. 4 feet in and 4 feet out_First, ock Arden. Mrs. D. N. Lee; second, Prince, M. Woolf: third, Jay Zee. D. B. Smith. Free-for-all handicaj feet. three horses 4 feet, 3_feet: performance ~First. Cathode R second. Hanging 5 Matrimony. Edwin Vaughan dle ponies—Pirst, Dark Kansas only to cou Elizabeth Nes| Farme: th CLASS third, Yy ohn S. Thornton CLASB 2" ' Half-bred vearling colts—First, Gloucester Whoopee, Mrs. E._Augustus; sec- Qray Silver. Frank Cockrill; third, ond. Bport Model, Chilton Yow CLASS §: ' Ju for ponies 12 Dawn. Henry Anthony an 2 feet, to under 16—First, Frost: thony and Geors ives: second. Kansas City Kitty, Joha hornton CLASS 4: Special class. given by the Vir- inie Horse Breeders' Association for vear- fing_colts suitable to become hunters, bred.| in Virginia and Jefferson County. W.'Va— Gray Bird. J. E. Barker; second, gray B third, Gray Stlver, An cit: Hunter champlonship. in which the award is the Culpeper Chalienge late. for the best hunter in the shok—Won v Rock Arden, Mrs. D. N. Le Racing Events. Summary of racing events: FIRST RACE Half mile: for Culpeper ind adjoining county horses—First, Show- | ond. Ann Cabell. P M. Browning sec rd, P Mis. M. R._Waugl SECOND RACE_ 'Half mile. open to al rst. Marjanus, Furr Bros.: second, Col third, Lindo V! One mile—First. Part v. Byers; second. Leesburg Lass, third. Two Pats, T. B. Gav H RACE ride of Glenmore, ree-fourths Furr Bros.; B. Carter] second, See third, Rock _avout se. Weaver: sec- a. . Horne: A. Reynolds; third. the s CENSUS SHOWS NEW TOWNS DOT TEXAS ‘Wide-Open Spaces of Former Years ; Now Occupied by Munic- ipalities. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (#)—Wide-open es in the map of Texas have been | tted with towns and cities in the| last 10 years, the census figures of 1930 show. Most of the new towns sprang up because of oil booms—some of them in spots where no one ever dreamed there would be even a village. One of the new towns is Best, on the lands of the University of Texas, built soon after the discovery of oil in the Big Lake fleld. McCamey was a spot on a flat be- tween two hills until 1925. Today it | has a population of 5,000. | Crane City was born a short time after McCamey. Less than five years ago Iraan was started, and now it is a model small | city. Bakersfield was built in a day in the Taylor-Link oil area of Pecos County. It grew to a population of 1,200 in two ‘weeks. ‘Winkler County has had a phe- nomenal growth. led by the .town of Wing, one of the largest boom cities | ever founded in Texas. Kermit, the county seat, had only 23 ‘yoters in 1925, but now is a good sized town. Cheyenne, another Winkler Coun- ty town, was founded recently. Other new towns that have grown up in the last few years because of ofl ‘booms are Hilton and Penwell, in Ector County, and New Drumwright, Midway bnd Ross City in Howard County. SOME TAXES 'ABOLISHED TO INCREASE POPULATION ftaly Favors Large Families in New Decree—Must Have Two Children. In conformity with the government's ampaign for large families, the Cabi- ket Council of Ministers has decided ‘that death duty or “succession tax,” as & is known here, will be abolished for 'all those families with two or more ehildren. Seven years ago generous exemptions were established in this re- spect. Up to the present day Italian ; families which had no children or ‘which had only one child were ex- eluded from death duty payment to the state, while other families were forced o l&”y such a tax. + Now those families with one 'or no ehildren will enter the taxable category. As is almost always the case, it is the large home with the lone “fair-haired” son which leaves any kind of inheri- tance worth mentioning. Although the law makers refrain from undue expla- nations as to the reason which caused @ revision of the death duty. they em- phatically assert that the money thus movemi gnation schemes. FORN Dynamite Kills Two. , W. Va, Ji 5 P).— Two workmen were killed and six others injured near here yesterday by premature explosion of dynamite and powder used on a road construction Pproject. R will be spent on land recla- |4 Top: The Headquarters Detachment of the 29th Division departs for Camp Meade. Middle: Naval Reservists with their sea bags lined up for final check before rd ship. Miss Opal Sheid bids her sweetheart, Jack Delacy, good-bye, —Star Staff Photos. LUPESCL BARRED FROM RUMANIA King Carol Has Reconcilia-; tion With Princess Helen. His Foe Departs. By the Associated Preas BUCHAREST, Rumania, July 5.— Two important developments bearing upon the tranquillity of the reign of King Carol II occurred today. Following reconciliation of Carol and his wife, Queen Helen, supposedly be- cause of the pleadings of their son | Michael, who was King, the government | tonight issued a note saying that all rumors relative to the return of Mme. magda Lupescu to Rumania were “in- ventions for propaganda purposes.” The | communication added that Mme. Lupes- cu “will never return to Rumania.” Coincident with the reconciliation of the royal pair, Prince Barbu Sirbey, long a power in Rumanian politics and | formerly styled the “real ruler of Ru- | mania,” charged with the responsibility for the abdication of Carol, left today for France, permanently, it was said in_circles close to the palace. Prince Stirbey was requested by King | Ferdinand to form a national ministry in June, 1927, and it was then assumed | |that he would exert the practical in- fluence of a ruler in Queen Marie's name after the King's death. He | formed & cabinet in which he assumed | the portfolios of the interior and for- eign minister as well as premier. News- paper stories were published in 1926 | in which Prince Carol was said to have | objected to Prince Stirbey. Subsequent | stories quoted Carol stating he would | retumn if Prince Stirbey was dropped t as court adviser. The Prince Stirbey | cabinet resigned June 21, 1927, | Legal proceedings for annuiment of | the divorce of Carol and Helen will| be instituted next week, thus eflecting an end of the official separation of more than a year. Carol was said to have | spent a great deal of time recently with his wife and his son, during which | time the little fellow, who obviously | had been lonesome for his father, had | melted the reserve of e MEXICO IMPROVES BORDER SERVICE Tourists Promised Courteous Re- ception—Migrating Labor ‘Will Be Helped. S Svecial Dispate Yotk Herald-tribuns. Coprient, 1030, MEXICO CITY, July 5.—A complete reorganization of the migration sufls' at both the American and Guatemalan borders, in order to further encourage tourist trade and to helJ: the Mexican laborer, has been ordered by Secretatry of the Interior Carlos Riva Palacio. Secretary Riva Palacio has instructed Andres Landa y Pina, chief of migra- tion, to appoint a competent person as director of migration along the Ameri- can border, to be stationed at Nuevo Laredo. This person is to reorganize the entire migration staff along the ggr?;l;, t:kl!rngi Clhl;ehtlhlt every membuelr staff is competent, cul- tured and mucn(eg, i & 2 L Along the Guatemalan border, with headquarters at Tapachula, State of Chiapac, through which porf of entry most of the Central American immi- grants come to Mexico, Moises Salcedo has just been named director of mi- gration. 3 The order for the reorganization of the migration staff comes upon the heels of several complaints received here from American tourists who charged that they were unnecessarily molested at the border upon entering Mexico. The new staff will be instruct- ed to see that all tourists are granted all possible accommodations, t no undesirable foreigners enter the repub- ic and that Mexicans emigrating meet all the requirements of the country to which they are going. It is explained t.h-‘ reorganization of the migration service is being installed first at the borders, since there is more immediate necessity for changes there than along the coasts. Cuba Building Long Road. HAVANA (#).—A bulletin issued by Dr. Carlos Miguel de Cespedes, minis- Toen’ ol " engagea. upon” the. central ‘upon e cen! highway, the motor road which is to span the island from end to end, and on an aqueduct for the city of Santiago 500 Chinese in European Colleges. NANKING (#).—Approximately 500 ORinese students are enrolled in Euro- pean universities says the ministry of education. Germany heads the list with g:iyoma-uolnmmun.mlmd, » Austria and France, and other public projects. ————— Small County Pays Big Tax. PIERRE, 8. D. (#).—Clay County, the n&nuutl ::unty in South Dll'fi:‘l‘ has 16 average assessed thl:l'flqfi its men. THE SUNDAY STAR, 'BLUE-RIBBON BULL SPLASHES AWAY FROM POLICE IN BAY RACE 1$10.000 Worth of Royal Bovine Blood Shows Heels to Pursuers After Fall Off New York Ferry. By the Associated Press. . NEW YORK, July 5.—Ten thousand | dollars’ worth of blue-ribbon bull went swimming in New York Harbor today, out distanced police boats, which gave him up for lost, and finally swam ashore in Brooklyn, where he was captured by swimmers and tied up to a post as meek. by that time, as an ordinary old milk cow. Answering to the name of Alphonse, | or maybe he doesn't, the. bull was en route to Brooklyn from Staten Isiand, on the first lap of an ocean trip to Germany, when he decided to go swim- ming. ‘The mate on the ferry aboard which | he was making the trip tried to argue it out with him, but after a couple of laps around the deck, with the bull | gaining on the straightaway and /the | mate picking up headway on the cor- | ners, Alphonse fell down and went | splash. =l Came the pursuit, first one police launch, then two, then three, then four, and a couple of tugs. | Puzzled policemen scratched their heads, tried maneuvering Alphonse to- ward shore, tried to lasso him, tried everything they could think of. Alphonse became bored, really settled down to swimming and they lost sight of him. Imagine the surprise of swimmers in Gravesend Bay an hour or so later when Alphonse arrived, panting. in their midst. Being resourceful, they secured some rope from a beached boat, lassoed him, tied him to a post and called the police, to which Alphonse gave meek acquiescence. He was tired of swimming, it appeared. He was taken aboard a truck of the Society for the Prevention or Cruelty to Animals, brought to Manhattan and held for his owner, Lester Satterthwaite of Newton, Pa. The only damage ap- peared to be a split hoof, probably acquired on the ferry boat. | Alphonse, the best Holstein bull in Pennsylvania, is to be shipped to Ger- many for exhibition at fairs there. Adventurous Moral Change nis roval parents. | 25 YEARS OF GOOD SERVICE ENDS WHENMESSENGER TAKES PAY ROLL! Leads to Wanderings With Girl and’ Finally Surrender. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, July 5.—For 25 years| George Frederick Williams was a good | He was married, had two children,| and lived on a street called Fingerboard | road, on Staten Island. As'a messenger for the Sterling Watch | Co., on Nassau street, he earned $30 a week, and his ergxloyes regarded him as a patient, plodding fellow, honest and faithful. Certainly if George Frederick Wil liams in all those years ever had a vagrant fancies and yearnings for a -| venture, he kept them to himself. Last January Williams was ill and| underwent an operation, and as he was recovering his family and_friends! thought they saw a change in him. He| appeared restless, nervous. | On_ April 29, as he was mlkmg the | trip he had made hundreds of times before, from the bank to his office with the company pay roll, Williams sud- Special Attention to Nervous People sve provided eversthing comfort in my ol of the con: rvices of a gradu enced dentist. Come_to Our Cool, Comfort- able Office for Expert Dental Advice FREE EXAMINATION iDC!ION ible Per Tooth, $6 and $8. Guaranteed All, Graduste Dentisty. Oral Hygienist Souire b nm‘;‘- ?‘fl?m oo'-l-g& able < Terms of Payment M DR. FREIOT Phone National 0019 denly revolted. He began, for the first time in the 53 years of his life, a mad adventure. He stole the pay roll. Then he eloped to Washington with a barber shop man- jcure girl. From Washington they drifted to Charleston, 8. C.,, to Chicago, and finally to Detroit. In Detroit the money gave out, and Williams walked into a police station and surrendered. After a probation officer had read the foregoing story from his report to Judge George L. Donnellan in General Ses- sions Court, Willlams sedately pleaded zutllty to the theft of his employers’ pay | roll. He was given an indeterminate sen- tence, one to two years in Sing Sing. WARmiINGTUN, oulia D €., NURSERY MODELS DELIGHT CHILDREN Mrs. George 0. Totten Tells How She Conceived Idea of Mother Goose Models. BY GRETCHEN SMITH. Bringing to children the beauty and poetry of Old Mother Goose by means of vivid little figures of cardboard, cut out and colored, with jointed limbs movable in realistic manner and set up on metal stands, is the work of Mrs, George Oakley Totten of 2633 Six- teenth street, soclally prominent, al- ready known throughout this country and Europe as an artist and sculptress. One might almost say that ,Mrs. Totten has brought to life the famous characters of the old nursery book. For several years, plaster figurines of Mother Goose and her children have been made with success by Mrs. Totten, who seeing how children loved and played with them, conceived the idea that by mak- ing figures which could be moved and twisted about, the children would enjoy, in even greater degree, their favorite characters and the unforgettable jingles of dhildhood. Develops Love for Art. “Children love to take beautiful things in their hands,” said Mrs, Totten. “They like to be able to play with the things they read about. Beautiful things about them also unconsclously develop a love of art.” It is almost impossible to realize that | out of bits of jointed cardboard, painted with water colors, one could create the {things of beauty which have resulted from Mrs. Totlen's inspiration. No mere paper dolls are these playthings. Executed with skill and vigor, each face |and figure bears a stamp of distinct individuality. Stretched out on a table as on parade, there passes an unforget- table pageant. | Led by Old Mother Goose, who can | wave her cane or turn her head to look at the gander following her, one sees all the characters known from infancy; Little Bo Beep, Mary, Mary, Quite Con- | trary: Little Boy Blue and every other | favorite loved by the little ones through- |out the world. | Particularly fascinating, even to the | grown-ups, will prove Mrs. Totten's | conception’ of Simple Simon. Seated above his “mother’s pail” Simon is holding a fishing line, which can be drawn out of the bucket, disclosing a plump little fish on the end of the hook, much to the delight of the children. Gets a Gold Fish. | “I felt so sorry for Simple Simon, |who went forth to catch a whale in | his mother’s bucket,” said Mrs. Totten, | “that I decided to let him get a nice | fat gold fish on the end of his line.” George Porgy is also to be seen kissin, two pretty Iittle girls, whose hands ang arms are able to be moved about accord- | ing to the interpretation of their owner. | Either a little girl may put her hands | to her face in shame or she may throw her arms responsively about Georgle Porgy's neck. It depends entirely upon the personal idea of the child playing with the figures. Little boys can have | the time of their lives scaring little Miss Muffet, whose spider, sitting down be- side her, can be made to crawl in most realistic manner. Others, may heartily envy Jack Horner eating his Christmas pie, as th> plum he pulls out has been most lusciously painted on the end of | Jack’s thumb. A tiny “Baby Bunting” has been cleverly cut out of tin by Mrs. Totten and placed in a cradle which really rocks. Mrs. Totten says that her figures have already proven so popular with her own children and those of her friends that they are beginning to show the result of energetic manipulation. As a result, she is considering reproducing them in metal, such as the Baby Bunt- {ing in tin, which can withstand the attentions of the most strenuous litt'e | | players. | Deep Inspiration. Mrs. Totten has had the deepest sort of inspiration for her lovely work. Hanging on the wall of her living room is the picture of a gayly colored Viking ship, whose sails are blowing merrily in an unmistakable gale. The picture was made by Mrs. Totten's 7-year-old son, George Oakley Totten, 3d. Not only has he shown the awakening of genius through the medium of painting, but he can play on the piano most entertain- ingly little bits of his own composition. | WILL T0 BE CO NTESTED Attorneys of Relatives of Mrs. Mary Ott File Notice. LOUISVILLE, July 5 (#).—Notice of an intended contest of the will of Mrs. Mary A. Ott of Atlantic City and Louis- | ville' when i is filed for probate on | July 10 has been filed in Atlantic City County Court, New Jersey, attorneys for Louisville relatives said today. The will disposes of an estate of $10,000,000. Mrs. Ott was the largest stockholder in the Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Co., Louisville, now merged with the Amer- | ican Radiator Co. . 717 Longfellow St. N.W. Like New SEMI-DETACHED { BRICK HOME Six Rooms; Bath; H. W. Heat; Electricit) Closed-in Sleeping Porch; Garage; Low Price; Easy Terms. E. R. Anderson, 717 Lonfellow St. N.W. Ga. 1914 If it looks cool... it is cool ... If your home is g paint, it looks cool, and it is cool. cracked, chipped and hot . . . they mean iven a coat or two of Worn, pealing surfaces look uncomfortable homes. “Murco” Lifelong Paint —on your porches and outdoor furniture will make summer more endurable. “Murco” will bring a cool beauty to paint-starved things . . . but more than that, it protects everything from wear, suggestions. Ask our experts for =] Murphy & INCORPORATED 710 12th St. N.W. 407 7th St. N. Entrance Next to Kay's National 2477 INFLUENCE FOR TO (0] List of Men Some Form 0£ maying Fact. BY OLIVER SHERWOOD. CHICAGO, July 5—At the end of this week Chicago had about concluded that Diogenes, back here with his lan- tern, would have a real task to find an honest man in a position of public trust. There seemed to be growing evidence that an apparently endless list of men with influence in public affairs had that influence for sale. One develop- ment after another led to that con- clusion, One of the city’s leading business men and philanthropists told in court how he had spent $42,000 to have his taxes reduced—the regular fee, half of the total reduction. This was just one incident revealing a whole system. Civil and criminal suits involving millions of dollars and involving numer- ous officials of the sanitary district of Chicago are coming to life. Hundreds were involved. A blow-up which threatens to reveal rackoteering on a broad scale through the use of news- paper influence, that Alfred Lingle, slain Other Corruption Indicated. Common gossip has it that irregu- larities, based on gang influence, and sale of official power have permeated gangster, the whole local government. Dynamite lies in the newspaper situa- tion. The Tribune harassed by darts irom editorial sanctums of other local NUMEROUS, CHICAGO FEELS in High Places Indulging in | for racketeering reasons, following _ allegations | Chicago | Tribune reporter, had been a gangster. | newspapers following revelations con- cerning Lingle, has begun to strike back. 415 7th St. N.W. SALE" SIGNS Graft Is Dis- Col. R. R. McCormick, publisher of that paper, promises now to go before the July grand jury to ask that full investigation be made of rumored con- nections of loca] newspapermen with rackets and gangs. “There are weak men on other newspapers and in other professions in positions of trust and | responsibility greater than that of | Alfred Lingle,” the Tribune sald editorially. “The murder of this reporter, even as the evi- dence indicates it may have been, made a breach in the wall which criminality has so long maintained about its opera- | tions here,” it added. “Sometime, some- where, there will be a hole found or | made and the Lingle murder may prove | to be it.” | A newspaper correspondent has promised to reveal the name of one | newspaper executive who, he says, told | him that he had the legs and arms of an outsider broken when he tried | to muscle in on his private racket, One | local reporter is reputed to be the “un- official mayor” of the city just as Lingle was known as the “unofficial chief of police.” Reporters’ cuts in various forms of graft are reputed to be | common. i Wants Full Inquiry. | “It 15 time the air is cleared,” one | leading local newspaper executive said today. “I hope that the grand jury delves into the situation that has bepni growing in rumor for years.” Only the churches remain free from insinuations that they have racketeer or gang connections. And it T MAXWELL’S main for the churches to bring s clean= up of local conditions. luence of newl&lrn with the public has been affec by & popular feeling that & few of them have not been free from entanglements. There is evidence now that conditions have become 80 bad that publishers of local newspapers are angered and ready to push through to clean up, Gangs. however, are as scornful as ever, and the brazen way they attempted a maksacre under the glaring lights of Chicago’s State street, home of some of the country's principal retail establish- ments, indicates the contempt under which they hold the authorities, Thus far nothing the authorities have done has served to temper the contempt. (Copyright, 1930.) JOBLESS ARE COUNTED Three and Half Per Cent of St. Louis Population Unemployed. ST. LOUIS, July 5 (#).—S8t. Louis has 27,669 unempolyed, or 3!, per cent of the announced population of 818,252, Census Supervisor Richard Hassall an- nounced today. This includes persons able to work and looking for jobs and does ot incllide persons temporarily laid off because of business depression. Street Named for Maurice Ravel. CIBOURE, France (#).—The Municipal Council of this Basque town has given the name of Maurice Ravel to the street on which stands the house in which the musician was born. A tablet was placed on the dwelling. Gold Vein Uncovered. IRKTUSK, Siberia (#).—A large gold vein was recently discovered near the border of the Yakutsk autonomous republic. Within a short time more than 3.000 fortune-seekers had swarmed over the place. As the result of placing a comb in the fire and placing it to her face, Jessie Barron died recently at New Deer, Scot~ 415 7th St. N.W. $75,000 Worth of Furniture in this July Sale at Discounts of 159, to 409, BED ROOM SUITES 26—4-Pc. Walnut-Fin- Actual $98.00 value. Now.. 4—4-Pc. Walnut Veneer Suites. Actual L S WO s89 18—4-Pc. neer, with 3 - mirror Vanity. A c- NGWF . oo o s109 14—4-Pc. - Actual $179 value. Now ... s].29 neer Suites with large Hollywood Vanity. BN 12 Suites. Values range just one each. Now. S198 Cabinets ... $35.00 China $15.00 Coil Spring Wood Bed, Special. . . . $29.50 Five-Piece ished Suites. 559 $149 value. Walnut Ve- tual $169. Walnut Ve- neer Suites. 29—4-Pc. Walnut Ve- Was $198 $139 up to $325; . Miscellaneous $16.50 Serving Closet ... $§20.00 Four-Poiter Enameled Breakfast Set Metal Beds Motal Bed ... $3:95 Meial Bed ... $5:95 Metal Bed..... ST-95 Metni Bed... $10-75 Day Beds Doy Bed ... $1075 Doy Bed ... $16:50 ona panel .. 51895 $3750 Coil $24.50 Spring Canmne Panel Effect. ... Liberal Credit ‘Whether Room Outfit or Single Article DINING ROOM SUITES 14—9-Pc. Walnut Ve- neer Dining Room Suites. Actual 579 $129 value. W= . ovsvei 7—10-Pc. Exceptionally ;V ell Mrde Suites. 169 value. Now .. s98 5—10-Pc. $185 Suites with matched veneers. Special Sale 5129 Pl oos 11—$219 Suites with Canopy China C a binet. 5148.75 Now . 17—Assorted 10-Pec. guitel. Were 269 to $298. INOwW: .o s].89 8—Assorted 10-Pc. Suites. Values up to $350. $229 Now LIVING ROOM SUITES 5—$119 3-Pc. Reversible Cushion Jacquard Living Room 879 SUitel o000 12—$149 3-Pc. Jacquard Loose-Cushion 89 8 Suites . 15—3-Pc. Mohair Suites; M o q uette; 3129 18 — Assorted and Jac- quard $219 - Kroehler Bed- avenport 11—3-Pc. Loose-Cushion Jac- 18—3-Pc. $189 Kroehler Jac- gu,rd Lg o s e - Cushioned uites. ov- 8139 R e v ersible. $189 value . Mohair 7—3-Pec. quard Suites. $169 value. ... $119 ered all over. . Entire Stock of Living Room Suites at Same Proportion Golden Oak Cane-Seat Chairs and Rockers While They Last Unfinished Windsor Chairs Regular $2.50 s l 39 Valwei.....oos Odd Vanities %’figg Dresser s l 6'95 Vanity Dresser s l 9'85 $49.50 Vanity Dresser. Vanity Dresser s29'50 Odd Dressers gam ST §26.50 i Dresser ... 32950 $49.50 $29.75 $26-50 $59.50 Dresser $14.50 Dresser Dresser $1.28 Green Mapuioe Rotk 09C Refrigerators Refrigerator ... 5865 Retssgerator .. S14T5 Retogentor . 51975 o $99.50 g S22 Refri!entor 829'75 (Libey Suites Suites, Now. . $29'75 AR 34 Suiten, Nw.. 53990 Rocker et $3.75 %,5‘(;')::3 C‘l:“"[t Rockers $15.75, Nogv Wl $8'95 All Tables Now 1, Off Delivers Any Single Article