Evening Star Newspaper, August 18, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

.~ MARSHALL FIELD " WEDS MRS. COATS Simple Ceremony Is Perform. | ed in Ten Minutes at Lon- don Registry Office. By the Associated Press. | LONDON, August 18.—Marshall Field, 8d, grandson of the famous Chicago merchant, was married today to Mrs. Dudley Coats, popular London social figure, at Marylebone registry office. Few people were about when an auto- mobile brought the two to the registry office at 8:30 am. The bride wore a Saxe blue-and-white costume with a white tam o' shanter, white shoes and white stockings. The bridegroom was at- tired in a lounge suit. ‘Witnesses were William Rollo, Mrs. Alexander Fawcus, Mrs. Margaret Bras: sey and Edward F. J. James, youngest brother of the bride. The ceremony was simple and lasted only 10 minutes. There were no flowers or decorations. Immediately after the civil ceremony, Mr. Field drew the photographers away | from his wife, leading them up a blind | alley while Mrs. Field went away by { | another route. The picture hunters had their inning | after the religious service, when Mrs. | Field held her husband’s arm and made him pose with her in the doorway of | the church before a battery of cameras. | The bride wore a sky blue georgette afternoon frock and hat, suede shoes. i Mrs. Field was described in the press &t her previous wedding, which was one | of the leading social events of 1922, as “the bride of 500 presents,” which in- | cluded gifts from the royal family. The new Mrs. Field is generally thought to be one of the most beautiful women in British society circles. She has enjoyed the close friendship of the Prince of Wales the Duke of Gloucester and Prince George and is a_popular follower of the exclusively Pytchley hounds. The newly married couple will leave fonight for the continent, where they will spend their honeymoon, part of their journey being made by air. Mr. Fleld’s own airplane was shipped from the United States for this purpose. They will return to the United States in three or four months, there to make their permanent home, returning to England occasionally for hunting. At the civil ceremony Mr. Field de- scribed himself, for the purpose of the official records, as the divorced husband of Evelyn Field, nee Marshall He gave his age as 36 and that of his bride-to-be as 28. Field arrived in England last Thurs- day on the Majestic from New York. His flancee met him at the dock. “Our wedding trip will be passed on the continent,” he said at that time. *If weather permits we will make it an serial trip, using a plane which I sent over last week."” 3 Mrs, Evelyn Marshall Field, 3d, daughter of Mrs. Charles H. Marshall of New York and London, obtained a divorce from Field at Reno August 4, after the filing of a petition only a few hours before. The two were married ; February 6, 1015, and have three chil- dren, Marshall, jr.; Barbara and Ber- i ce. Mrs, Coats was considered one of the most beautiful debutantes of her year, Bhe is the former Miss Audrey James, daughter of Mrs. Willie James, & popu- lar London hostess. Her husband, Oapt. Coats, an officer of the Scots Guards, died at Cannes in 1927, at the age of 29, his death occur- Ting largely from wounds received during the World War. She has been a fre- quent visitor to the United States and s a friend of the Prince of Wales. TRAPSHOOTERS GATHER FOR HANDICAP TOURNEY Nation’s Crack Gunners in Compe- tition at Vandalia—$500 Tro- phy Among Listed Awards. with navy blue ! By the Associated Press. DAYTON, Ohio, August 18.— The Nation's crack gunners gathered at Vandalia today for the opening of the thirty-first Grand American Handicap trapshoot tournament at the new home of the Amateur Trapshooting Associa- Six national championships will be decided during the firing which will reach & climax Priday, the final day of the shoot, with the holding of the Grand American Handicap. Today entrants shot for the 10 places on the East and |West teams which will compete for the $500 trophy to- morrow. The State team champion- ship, the State individual champion- ship, the veterans' race and the pro- fessional clay target championship of North America will be decided Wednes- day. Priday the preliminary handicap will be held. Unusually good scores are expected to be chalked up by the expert field, which includes eight former winners of the Grand American Handicap. In the @0 years’ competition no champion has @ver been able to repeat his victory. Porto Rico’s pineapple crop was 50 farge this year that canning factories had to work overtime. L _NOTICES. HEREBY GIVEN THAT ON 8 .M., for storage and repair charges, C Tolet' Coach 1685653, _ left pame of Robert Hopki 7P St. N. Parties interested please take notice WELDIT CO.. By A. L. Cameron, Treasurer WILL ANY PERSON WHO WITNESSED AN an m. on 5 by which a gentieman was fatally by_a_taxicab. communicate with D, SADLER, Denrike Building, N n 8 last. injured JORN on e M R RTH FOR FIL) CIN oF Connecticut_ave. from Military rd.. nort & large quantity to be had for the cost oniy of hauling and spreading. Address Box »;a -E, Star office 180 ©ebts unless contracted by myself person- gl _WILLIAM D. REDDING, Natiopai = 2 FOR SALE—1 1927 NASH SEDAN, 90, 1 927 Dodge Touring, 350 These cars are ing sold, for storage and repairs. Tolson's Garage, 1702 13th st n.w - ALE—UPRIGHT PIANO, $15; PLAYER- o DAy storase chares. UNITED TO OR Pittshurgh. q National 1460 G-DISTANCE ~ MOVING — WE — HAVE een keeping faith with the public since When investigators opened the safety deposit boxes of Jack Zuta, THE EVENING ain vice lord, they found many mysterious papers bearing names of many public officials. Joseph W. Schulman and former Judge Among the papers were canceled checks made out to Municipal Judge Emanuel Eller. They will be asked to explain what they know of Zuta's affairs. The above photo shows Schulman (left) and Eller (right) and was taken as a municipal judge. GRAHAM B. NICHOL | NAMED FOR NEW POST Will Direct Public Relations Divi- sion of Revenue Bureau, Supply- ing Information to Public. | Providing additional facilities for pub- lice service and the dissemination of information on taxation matters, the | Bureau of Internal Revenue is estab- lishing & public relations division under the supervision of Graham B. Nichol. Mr. Nichol has been head of the in- formation division of the Revenue Bu- reau for more than a decade. This office is to be continued and will be designated as the information :section of the public relations division. The enlarged office will muintain needed contacts between the Internal Revenue Bureau and the press and will supply information to newspaper men, taxpayers, attorneys and others. It | will function from the first floor, | Twelfth and B street entrance of the | new Revenue Building. Mr. Nichol, as stated, has been long in service as head of the existing in- formation unit and will have increased responsibilities under the realignment and augmented division. He is a former newspaper man, entering the In- ternal Revenue Bureau as a contact man between the press and the bureau | in_1917. Mr. Nichol has & thorough grasp of revenue laws and regulations, has writ- ten several series of informative articles on taxation problems and has broad- cast over the radio. As head of the enlarged information and public rela- tions organizations he will have in- creased opportunity and responsibility in this fleld and is being congratulated today on the assumption of his greater duties in a centralized information division. He is a native of Indiana, but has resided in Washington since a youth, ~ Pet Poodle Lives in Luxury. NEW YORK, August 18 (#).—In the Fifth Avenue mansion of Miss Ella B. ‘Wendel, 78, heiress to vast realty hold- ings and last of her line, a small white poodle dines in state with her when she is in the city. The poodle sleeps in a high-backed bed, twin to the cne his mistress occupies. Will Rogers TAHOE TAVERN, Calif.—If you want to read the most beautiful thing that's been written in years, it is not a lle, it’s not an editoriaj, it's a wil wouldn't that so much love for all mankind could be 5o practically expressed as it is in the will of ex-Senator Phe- lan of Frisco. Most of you will only read that he left Helen Wills $20,000, but get a paper with a copy of the entire will and you will say, “Why there is a man that wanted to do some good.” For pure charity and tolerance toward all races and creeds it's’ a masterplece. It makes me feel ashamed that I ever knocked a | Fisher. Senator. when Schulman was swearing in Eller —A. P. Photo. MORE SENSATIONS EXPECTED IN ZUTA GRAFT INVESTIGATION (Continued From First Page.) said he had established “M. K.'s” iden- tity as Matt Kolb, ward politician. Kolb, the investigators believed, was the “go-between” for Zuta and those with whom he had dealings. Names Found on Checks. Among the names already made pub- lic by Roche in the investigation of Zuta's papers are those of Municipal Judge Joseph Schulman, Former Judge Emmanuel Eller and Attorney Louis I. These names were found on checks in Zuta's boxes. Names of the other public officials, Roche sald, were expected from fur- ther investigation of Zuta's records. “We have much more than we have made public,” Roche said. “Before we disclose the rest of it we must question many persons and bring together every bit of evidence into a perfect pattern.” ‘The Herald and Examiner today said that these undisclosed records contain a notation showing that a virtual po- litical board of directors composed of eight politiclans secretly governed gam- bling, vice and booze interests through- out the county. This evidence, the paper said, indi- cates that the eight persons shared millions in gang graft yearly. It shows, the paper continued, how these graft privileges had been divided and lists the particular territory over which each politiclan was recognized czar. Names of these men, the paper said, are being withheld while investigators under Roche are following the labyrinth of connections involved. A corps of detectives competed with anxious gangsters today in the search for the Zuta holdings siill unfound but believed to rest in secret niches some- where in the city. Authorities said they have information that two trunks con- taining ledgers and a $250,000 emer- ency fund were hidden by Zuta before is desth. Authorities also sought to locate & number of persons and offices named in the papers already impounded. FINANCIER'S KILLER IS CALLED TO TRIAL Insanity Plea Expected for Keaton, Who Shot Flint After Stock Losses. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, August 18.—Prank D. Keaton, Inglewood, Calif.. who shot and Killed Motley Fiint, Los Angeles financier, in a court room, was called to trial today on a murder charge. Keaton's counsel, Paul D'Orr, an- nounced he would withdraw a previous not guilty plea and plead not guilty by reason of insanity. Keaton, who frequently dabbled in stocks on the local exchange, shot Flint three times as the banker stepped from the witness stand where he had been testifying in a civil suit. The slayer later said he had lost heavily on his investments and believed Flint could have prevented the losses. Insurance Expert Dies. SAN_FRANCISCO, August 18 (F).— L. A. Redman, attorney, international expert on insurance Jaw and authority on astronomical physics, died here yes- terday after an iliness of six weeks. He was 67 years old. & By the Associated Press TORONTO, August 18.—The debt of radio broadcasting to the newspaper “is beyond all computation,” Dr. Lee de Forest, ploneer inventor, told the an- nual convention of the institute of radio enginers which opened here today. Decrying what he described as “the use of broadcast for direct and blatant advertising,” Dr. De Forest, delivering his address as president of the insti- tute. stressed the part the dally press had played in popularizing broadcast- ng. sRld‘O'l debt to the newspaper for daily program notices, program reviews and for the generous radio sections is beyond all computation. Unquestion- ably it was this astonishing interest on the part of the press in broadcastini during its early, struggling days, 1 years ago, which alone enabled it to survive those erucial years until an awakened popular interest made radio 3658 “Ask about our Country.wide service 31l Mational 9220, DAVIDSON TRANSFER 5_5'1‘_%&9"‘20__,,,*,,7, B CHAIRS FOR RENT, SUITABLE FOR WED: i arties, church suppers or festivals. rom 10¢ o 30c Der sy each: new. chairs TYED STATES STORAGE CO. 418 10t st now. Metropolitan 1844. R_RENT—ENTIRE SECOND FLOOR IN uiléing_ directiy opposite Potomac Electric oner Co.s tew “building, corner 10(b & Sy 75 1t Suitable for siEn h fe or light menutsc. 0 m 20 10th st. n.w Wanted—Return Loads il . New York City. Rochester. T adelphia. - Columbys. ~ Onio: "Ashewiiie *'and anywhere in_ Vermont or New ampshire. LOng-isiance moving our spe- cialty. g Smith’s Transfer & Storage Co., 1213 You Bt _ Norih 3343 —is_bound to hoid in Weather. We see 10 it U 3-6o0d job—the kind thet keeps you dry. 2 asult us NOW. ACTIS Rooine ' 110 Srd 8t. BW. KOONS Disiriet_0933. e A B Printing Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity fThe National Capital Press #8i0-1213 D Bt. N.W. Phone National 0650. ( self supporting. Place for Ad . 3 llncemlkfl(l that the debt will be artially re) only when certain forms of mvem.-f:c most obviously ill-suited for radio’s medium go to printed NEWSPAPER HELP TO RADIO LAUDED BY PIO NEER INVENTOR De Forest Decries Use of Broadcast in Direct Advertising, Addressing In- stitute of Radio Engineers. inherent limitations will never permit it to supplant news print, yet radio has largely eliminated extras on prize fight results, and has shown a curtail- ment of interest in base ball news. But radio ‘has this limitation—it must pre- sent its programs when the broadcasters se and not when the listeners de- lh:le_ 1!.;' 4 ‘urning to the question of broad- cast advertising, Dr. De Forest said m! in his inaugural address last January he sought “ta point out a very real dan- ger to the fullest usefulness and enjoy- ment which radio has power to confer, a menace steadily growing greater. This, he said, was “the use of the broadcast for direct and blatant adver- tising in larger and longer doses.” Higher Considerations. “If we consider the prosperity of the industry alone.” he continued, “we en- gineers, dependent on radio for our live- lihood, have ample grouds for emphatic protest. But there are higher con- siderations —the thought that short- sighted avarice is at work to curtail the usefulness, the beneficence of radio in the home, in the school, as a means of entertainment, of education, of up- sheet. “The influence of radio the press has now become profound, While its for Government 1ift generally. Unless the evil is vols untarily cured we are hs-}efl straight regulation. STAR, WASHINGTON, SIS0 SPENT FORRECLANATION Report Shows Beneficiaries Have Returned $91,930,000 of Funds to Government. By.the Associated Press. The Nation's investment toward re- clamation of arid and semi-arid lands| of the West this year reached an ag- gregate of $149,200,000. Against the amount advanced by the end of the fiscal year on June 30 for storage and diversion of water to make the desert productive. a total of $91 930,000, or 62 per cent had buen re- turned to the fund from beneflsiaries living on the reclamation projects. As fast as the money spent in con- struction of dams and irrigation works is repaid in annual installments by the beneficiaries it is used again for con- struction\ of other projects. ‘When Congress passed the original reclamation act in 1902 it provided that the fund for reclamation purppses be made up from sale of public- lands. Later it appropriated to the fund re | ceipts from sales and royalties from mining of coal, phosphates, oil, oil shale, gas sodium and from waterpower Ili- censes. From time to time Congress has changed the plan of repayment. A longer time has been provided for re- payment, which lessens the annual con- struction charge to the beneficiaries. During the fiscal year 1930 collec- tions redeposited to the fund amounted to $6.350,000 and the Government's contribution through the various sources totaled $3.475,000. NAVY AIR ACROBATS T0 FLY ACROSS U. S. Remarkable Upside-Down Stunts May Be Exhibited at Chicago Races. ‘The new Anacostia Naval Air Station acrobatic fighter section, equipped for formation flying upside down, which promises to become one of the best tnown military acrobatic formations vet produced, is to make its first cross- country flight this week and may make its official debut at the National Air Races in Chicago before returning home. Accompanied by David S. Ingalls, As- pistant Secretary of the Navy for Aero- nautics, the three planes of the forma- tion, piloted by Lieut. Matthias B. Gard- ner, native of the District of Columbia and leader of the section; Lieut. Aaron P. Storrs, 3d, and Lieut. Frederick M. Trapnell, will leave the local air station Thursday morning for Cleveland. The three planes of the formation are single-seater fighters, each equipped to fiy upside down indefinitely and to per- form in the inverted position all the maneuvers possible to the ordinary plane in the normal position. Prelim- inary tests by the section over Anacostia during the past few weeks indicate that this form of flight may become & de- cisive factor in future aerial combat. The demonstration of inverted forma- tion acrobatics developed by the three crack Navy pilots is described as the most amazing formation flying yet seen in this country. Secretary Ingalls will fly his own sis gle-seater fighter and will be accom- panied by his aide, Comdr. Robert P. ‘The five fighters will be followed by a Navy Fairchild cabin monoplane, car- rying mechanics and supplies for the formation. From Clevelarid the planes may fly later this week to Chicago, though no orders have yet been received from the Navy Department for the formation to appear at the Chicago races. THREE CRAS!-.lES KILL TWO Four Others Hurt in Accidents at Grifin, Ga. GRIFFIN; Ga., August 18 (#).—Two persons were killed and four others in- jured, one probably fatally, in there automobile accidents here yesterday. The dead: Miss Wilma Glazer, 14, Haralson, Ga., and R. N. Thaxton, 51, of Griffin, Ga. ’ ‘The grandfather of the Glazier girl, J. H. Glazier, 60, of Rover, Ga. ceived injuries that may prove f: Misses Mamie and Cora Manning and Bob Manning, brother and sisters, of Atlanta wyere injured less seriously. THE. “SUNSHINE” OF FLOWERS BRINGS REAL JOY— Expressing Love, Sym- pathy, Respect and Af- fection. The Blackistone FLORAL SERVICE the ultimate isfaction. of 14th St. (Our New Address) 1407 H Street National 4805 SPECIAL Chevrolet Service Combination During August—Save Money 87 Combination No. 101 Clean carbon, grind valves, install all new gaskets, check and set tim- ing, clean spark plugs, true and set ignition points clean and adjust buretor, tune motor, drain and refill crankcase, lubri- cate all alemite connec- tions, repack front wheel bearings, fill all grease cups, ofl sprlnd,u, fill trans- mission and differential to proper level, repack uni- versal, WASH CAR. 4 Cylinder 6 Cylinder $6Msfiw These Prices Include Labor and Material ALWAYS OPEN OURISMAN Chevrolet Sales Co. 610 H St. N.E. Ph. Linc. 10200 Molten, jr., flying another single seater. | D. C., MONDAY, Scientist Finds Male BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE. By the Associated Press. August 18.—Discovery that the femi- nine body stands high temperature bet- ter than the male has been made at Carnegie Institution. The finding is said by its authoer, Dr. Oscar Riddle, to be an important part of the processes of nature that deter- mine sex. Male Metabolism Shown. He finds that high temperature slows down male metabolism more than fe- male. Metabolism is the production of energy. Ordinarily from youth to old age male metabolism produces more energy than female, so the Carnegie discovery means that the male loses his margin of energy superiority when the temperature goes too high. It was disclosed in five years experimenting with ring doves and pigeons, but Dr. Riddle quotes experiments of several other scientists to show that it probably applies also to humans. “We are now able to report and fully establish, for the first time in any ani- mal,” he says in a report written for the Second International Sex Congress, “a differential response in the sexes to metabolism measurements at higher and lower temperatures.” At 68 degrees the males showed an energy production of 3,861 calories, the females 3,749. When the temperature was raised to 86 Fahrenheit, the male calory production dropped to 2,777, go- ing lower than the female, Which dropped to only 2.989. The decrease was 28.1 per cent for the males and 20.3 for the females. AU SUPERIOR RESISTANCE TO HEAT OVER MALES MARKS FEMALES Lost When Temperature Rises, in Ex~ periments With Pigeons and Doves. COLD SPRING HARBOR, N. Y. | GUST 18, 1930. Margin of Energy Is| Dr. Riddle says the male, including man, has more red blood cells than the female and more of the red pig- | ment that gives the color to ‘blood. This pigment, hemoglobin, is the stuff that picks up oxygen in the lungs and | carries it through the body. In ring | doves and pigeons the excess red pig- ment of males is 7 to 9 per cent. “Upon and around such general con- | ditions,” says Dr. Riddle, “as higher | |level of tissue oxidations (use of oxy- | | gen) in the male, differential sex re- |sponse to temperature, and extra | hemoglobin in the Male blood, are sus- | | pended the vital functional levels of | most or all the parts of the organism. These are the things that most directly | determine the muscular and all other efforts expended in respiration, the work of the circulatory organs, the regulation of heat loss, together with the level and degree of nerve action thus involved; directly or indirectly they calibrate the digestive work, secretory flow, and excretory- output. Primary Difference of Sex. “They are thus deeply vital, internal, and functional things. They operate | and persist during all stages of life. They are the various facts of basic metabolic _difference—each _stage of which is easily identifiable and meas- | urable also as a sex difference. They | constitute the primary sex differenc | " Dr. Riddle says the metabolism dif- | fgrences should lead to better under- | standing of the work of those sclentists | who now fix at will the sex of some | small animals before birth, and of | those who at will cause sex to change | |or reverse in some living things of very | TRAILER OFFICIAL DENIES $500,000 FAKE SALES No Money Spent Except Through Recognized Channels, Says Wis- consin Man of Suit Charge. 1 By the Associated Press. EDGERTON, Wis, August 18—J. A McIntosh, treasurer of the Highway Trailer Co., of Edgerton, nied the assertion of a private investi- gator in a suit filed in Chicago, that his firm paid out $500,000 through fake sales agencies in connection with the sale of garbage wagon trailers to the City of Chicago. The charges which McIntosh said were untrue were made by Robert M. Teifer, jr., in a suit against the Fruer- hauf Trailer Co. of Detroit for $100,000 for salary and expenses said to have been incurred while investigat- ing business methods of the Edgerton firm. Telfer asserted $500,000 was given “various persons” by the Highway Trailer Co. to put over the Chi- cago sales. McIntosh said his company spent no money except through recog- nized sales agencies. Flower Street Passes. HONGKONG (P).—“Flower street,” one of the landmarks of Hongkong, is being demolished to make way for a | modern thoroughfare. The flower ped- | dlers moved to another street nearby. In 9x12 and scatter size: drastic reductions. < prise and delight you. today de- | CHINESE RUGS A choice collection of super-yarn Chinese rugs is included. sizes, at prices which will both sur- "TOLL OF QUAKE CUT | " FROM 2,142 T0 1,475 Fascist Statement Says Many Who | Failed to Answer Call Have | Since Appeared. | | By the Assoclated Press. ROME, August 18.—An order sheet of the Fascist party said today that | the total deaths in the earthquake of | July 23 numbered only 1475, in con- | trast to the previous official total of 2,142, | The statement said the reason for | the reduction was that many persons had been found who previously had | ot answered roll call in the stricken | towns because they had fled to the hills or_to relatives in other villages, It also said that a complete list of the dead, with names and places of residence, would soon be issued, and condemned reports published, abroad at the time of the quake that the deaths ranged from 5000 to 15,000, with mil- | ons homeless. It denied that the gov- ernment had hidden the truth for pur. poses of promoting tourist business. | TIsraelite Leader Dies. | BUDAPEST, Hungary, August 18 (#).—Solomon’ Eulenburg, 79, president | of the Hungarian National Israelite | Bureau, died here today. | ADMITS COLLECTING §6.000 FROM RING Rum Money Alleged to Have! Been Used in Oregon Campaign. By the Associated Press. SEATTLE, August 18.—More testi- mony from Albert Hubbard, Govern- | ment witness, was in store today at the conspiracy trial of Roy C. Lyle and Wil- liam Whitney, former Federal prohibi- tlon officials, and three others accused A-3 of corruption in administering the dry law. : In testimony already given, Hubbard, alleged “contact man” between rum- runners and Government officials, said {he had collected thousands of dollars | from Roy Olmsted' and other Pacific | Northwest liquor kings for payment to the former prohibition officials. Among other things, Hubbard testi- fied he had collected $6,000 from Olm- sted and other rum-runners in 1926 and passed it on as a campaign contribution in the United States senatorial race under way that year. In that race United States Wesley L. Jones, noted dry, was elected over A. Scott Bullitt, a wet. Other defendants are Lyle's subordi- nates, Pearl Corwin and R. L. Pryant, and Clifford T. McKinney, former assistant United States attorney. Inchmurrin, the largest island in famed Loch Lomond, Scotland, was re- cently sold and will be used as a pri- vate eslate, MARLOW SAYS: It Pays to Deal With Friends FAMOUS READING ANTHRACITE is a friend of your comfort and your pocketbook. And you'll like the friendly ser ice that Marlow gives. Phone your order TODAY, before September sends prices higher! Mariow CO AL Company 811 E St. N.W. Don't forget the address Thel w. Phone Nat. 0311 Yigy District 3324-3325 l STOKES SAMMONS Window Shades MADE OF du Pont TONTINE ny o service guarante d_time aga jury to the . Why put Factory made—perfect At Our modern laundry is prepared to wash your old du Pont Tontine window shades if your home is equipped with this type of shade now. el L O — - $100,000.00 SALE OF If you have not visited us before—do so now. It will be a revelation in Oriental Rug values—and each rug is guaranteed genuine, hand woven, and exactly as represented: The items suggested below convey but a slight idea of the importance of the savings. SCATTER SIZE PERSIAN RUGS $19 $27 $39 Average 3x5 feet to 4x7, in Afshars, ROOM SIZE PERSIAN Hamadans, Mosouls and Kurdistans. RUGS $189 « $265 Approxi_mately 9x12 feet. Genuine mastgrpieces of Oriental weaving, A Fine Selection OF SAROUKS at All RS S0 50 ZENS S Fereghan, 10x14 feet ...... . . eimcamesm oo, Antique Heriz, 10x18 feet ; I Old Type Mahal, 11x19 feet Ispahan, 11x15 feet approxi $1,500 mately .. cr. §2,000 DULIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. anad l” Wmmnmmmmm

Other pages from this issue: