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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., SEPTEMBER 21 1930—PART ONE. . FIRE COMPANIES TIE FOR HONORS Chevy Chase and Gaithers- burg Departments Each Win Cup. Br & Staff Correspondent of The Star. BETHESDA, Md., September 20. The Chevy Chase and Gaithersbur ‘Washington Grove Volunteer Fire De- fi,‘m’"u divided honors this afternoon standing hook-up contests staged on | | the Georgetown road by the Bethesda | “mmcm. { Dudley Browne cup, which has been won in past years by Sandy Spring. | Chevy Chase and Bethesda, went to the | Galthersburg-Washington Grove team, while the cup offered this vear for the first time by the Bethesda Volunteer Fire Department was won by Chevy Chase. The Browne cup must be won three years by the same team in order to obtain permanent possession. The Bethesda cup becomes the property of the Chevy Chase department by v‘lnue' of its victory. Tied for First Place. The first run-off for the Browne cup ended with Chevy Chase and Gaithers- burg-Washington Grove tied for first place with time of 19.2 seconds. The two leading companies repeated the hook-up test, with Gaithersburg-Wash- ington Grove bettering its former mark by a tenth of a second, while Chevy Chase dropped back to 222 seconds. The rules of the contest required the team to unroll 200 feet of hose and “show water.” For the Bethesda cup, the laying of but 150 feet of hose was required. The time of the Chevy Chase team was 17.4, and that of Bethesda, which was given second place, 17.5. The contests were staged in front of the Bethesda Fire House before a crowd of several hundred residents of the neighborhood. Seven fire departments, all of Mont- ery County, competed. They were ml ‘Hyattstown, Bethesda, Gaithers- burg-Washington Grove, Kensington, Silver Spring, Chevy Chase and Rock- ville. Chief Hiram Musgrove of the Bethesda department was in charge of the events. The judges were Fifth Bat- talion Chief Thomas B. Stanton, Lieut. | K. W. Weston and Pvt. Irving Hall. all of the Washington Fire Department. Watson Presents Cups. The cups were presented to the win- ners by Chief Engineer George S. Wat- son of the District. Other invited guests who attended included Corporation Counsel William W. Bride, Dudley Browne, donor of one of the cups; M. C. Shieid, superintendent of the Chevy | Chase Fire Department; O. P. M.| Brown, president of the Bethesda Fire Board; Mayor J. William Stohiman u!‘ Somerset, Mayor Frederick Parks of Chevy Chase, Col. Thomas Hampton, secretary to the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission: Chief Willlam F. Lanaha nof the Chevy Chase department, and William Orme, ir., secretary of the Chevy Chase Fire Board. Lo Chevy Chase. ersburg-Washington Grove teams. The Gaithersburg-Washington Grove Volunteer Fire Department team (top), which won the Dudley Browne Cup in the standing hook-up contests held yesterday afternoon at Bethesda. Their victory came as 2 result of a run-off tie with MARYLAND FIREMEN IN KEEN COMPETITION —Star Staff Photos. | SAILORS ON CRUISE T0 HAVE FILM TREAT, | 200 Enlisted Men Being Trained | in Sound Operating Schools for Talkie Productions. | Contracts for the manufacture of | some 200 talking picture machines are | to be awarded October 1, so that the sailors on the southern cruise to Cuba | and other Latin American points can | hear as well as see the latest movies. To get ready for this treat, the Navy is setting about training 200 enlisted men in sound operating schools, which the contractors are to set up. Installation of the “talkie” devices | is to be done under the supervision of | these newly trained men and is ex- pected to be completed by the end of this year. When the fleet sails south- ward in January, the Navy expects to have the fleet equipped with “talkies.” Through co-operation of a dozen large motion picture producers, the service will be enabled to obtain “talkies” at cally the same price as the old sile reels Construction of a motion picture ma- | chine for service aboard ship is totally | different from the land theater propo- sition, the naval officials pointed out yesterday. The Navy must guard against the sound “being blown over- board,” and for this reason, “it is essen- tial that the sound projections gener- ally be from forward aft” Vibra- tions of the vessel and concussion from gunfire must be taken into considera- | tion when setting up sound equipment afloat. The Navy has been experimenting | with sound films aboard the fleet flag- ship U. 8. 8. Texas. For the purchase of soung equpiment, the last Congress appropriated $332,000, with the in- dorsement of President Hoover. DISARMAMENT AIM Premier Asks League to Call Agricultural Interests Claim Mayfair Ball Rooms by _ Conference Soon— Ac- tion Seems Doubtful. By the Associated Press. GENEVA, September 20.—The League of Nations Assembly closed its second | The Canadian business world generally | week today on a note of mew demand for early disarmament sounded by Pre- mier James H. Scullin of Australia. This British dominion chief joined his voice with those of Arthur Hender- son, British foreign secretary, and the spokesmen of other powers, great and small, who called for more speed in enacting a general scheme for leaving aside warlike weapons. The Assembly now has heard with accumulating emphasis denunciations of existing armaments and rivalry from the leaders of peoples in every part of the earth since the British minister, nine days ago, summoned the League to return to Its original purpose of accom- plishing disarmament. Italy and France Factor. With these urgent calls for armament reduction ringing in their ears, the delegations of France and Italy, whose controversy Is to disarmament progress, admitted that their efforts to get together on a satis- factory basis have thus far proved un- satisfactory. In authoritative quarters it was felt that prospects for a successful meeting of the Preparatory Disarmament Com- en as the chief obstacle | - CANADIAN TARIF Revised Schedules Ignore Farmer. ! 8pecial Dispatch to The Star. | OTTAWA, ©Ontario, September 20— applauds the stiff tarff increases an- |nounced in Ottawa this week. Heads of woolen mills, cotton factories and artificial silk plants have expressed in | the press and in telegrams to the capi- tal their approval, and have predicted increased activity and added employ- ment in their establishments. A number of woolen mills in Ontario will reopen at once, and at least one glass factory will resume operations One of the largest tailoring firms in the empire has protested against the great increase in duties on British woolen cloth, commenting that many lines can- not be secured in Canada and that prices are sure to go up. Steel Industry Less Enthused. The steel industry is less enthusi- astic, being hit in certain lines nearly as much as it is assisted in others. the farm machinery trade, the general sentiment is that of approval, but one firm pointed out that increased steel duties probably mean increased cost of production. The leading financial paper of To- | ronto, while approving the changes on the whole and commending the effort to prevent exploitation of the consumer, points out that “hastily considered leg- islation” introduces a number of hard- In | TURNERRELEASED INMYSTERY CASE Witnesses Say He Is Not Man Accused of Franklin County, Va., Slaying. ROCKYMOUNT, Va. September 20 | (N.AN.A.) —Ird J. Turrfer, prisoner for | three months in Franklin County Jail, | | under suspicion of being Ed Saul, who| | is alleged to have killed Marshall King, | | near Henry, in this county, in 1907, | was released yesterday, following testi- | mony of 10 witnesses that he is Turner | and not Saul. | in the Circuit and horseman of Lacey Springs, who | says Turner worked for him in 1907: | W. A Rhodes and A. R. Miller of | B'“ndwly and S. E. Hoover of Timber-| ville. | All of these gave practically the same testimony. They said they had known | Turner as jockey and horseman in| Rockingham ~ and that to their best knowledge and belief the prisoner was | Turper. Mr. Rhinehart said Turner was handling horses for him from May to November, 1907, and that to the best of his knowledge was not in Franklin! County during that period. Other wit- nesses knew the defendant as Turner and most of them knew him prior to 1907, | OVERLOAD CAUSED | ALEXANDER CRASH Coroner's Jury Also Says Fog Led to Drop That Killed Woman | Aviator. World Message »cted Soon Is Expe From Conan Doyle Widow Declares He Taking Rest Before Telling of Heaven. By the Associated Press. SOUTHAMPTON, England, September 20.—Lady Conan Doyle today declared she believed her late husband, Sir Ar- ) thur, shortly would have an important | message for the world. 'he dead spiritualist leader and cre- | ator of Sherlock Holmes, his widow as- serted, was not taking a much needed “holiday” after having lived a most strenuous life. “We have received several messages | NEBRASKANDEAES - " Y PRCE EXCES? Maryland Complaint Advan- tage Taken of Drought Conditions Surprises. By the Associated Press. LINCOLN, Nebr. September 20.—A denlal that' Nebraska hay producers | were overcharging for their product was made today by H. J. McLaughlin, State | Secretary of Agriculture. | ~ Commenting on a_ charge made at:-' Baltimore today by I. W. Heaps, Sec- . | Tetary of the Maryland Dairymen’s As- | sociation, that farmers of several ha from him,” she said. ‘“He is very happy. producing States of the West were The hearing took place | He will let us have more detailed in- .ondoners Adopt Steps Taken From| Zulus’. War Dz:mcei T RTIN, 1 “Moochi’” Introduced to Exhibition Dancers. LONDON (#).—Mayfair ball rooms | have adopted a modified version of & | Zulu war dance as the very latest step. | The “Moochi” is & Zulu war dance which was discovered by Robert Sielle | |and Miss Annette Mills, exhibition dancers, during a tour in South Africa. | Noticed Student Dance. “At a ball in Johannesburg we no- ticed college students dancing in an entirely new rhythm and in a very ex- | aggerated fashion,” Miss Mills ex- | plained. | “We asked where they had learned the dance, and they replied: ‘This is | what the Zulus do.' | “Later we went to 8 Zulu war dance | with an interpreter, who told the Zulus | that we were from ‘King George's country.’ They thought we were rela- tives of the King and that we were going to do the dance at Buckingham Palace, and they showed us all the steps. “We have collected some Zulu folk tunes to which the “Moochi’ is danced. It is & most catching rhythm and can be danced by any one, old or young, |* and it s not so boisterous as the Charleston. It is neither waltz nor fox trot, neither one step nor Charleston,” says Miss Mills. There are three beats to each bar, and there are six simple steps. | The offi;ctal board of ball room danc. |ing has decided to make the “Moochi the “star” dance of the season. { Court, with Judge P. H. Dillard pre- | siding. Turner left at once for his former home at Broadway, Rockingham County. The witnesses who identified the prisoner as Turner were all from Rock- ingham County. Most of them said they knew him prior to 1907, and one testified. that Turner was 'handling horses during the Summer of 1907 and he feit certain he was not in Franklin | County during that time. Calls Trial Inadvisable. At the preliminary hearing yesterday Judge Dillard said that the results of the examination made it appear im- possible for the State to identify the prisoner as Saul and that he thought it inadvisable that a trial hinging on that point should be undertaken The release ended one of the strangest cases In the annals of Virginia courts. Last June a man was arrested in Ash- land, Ky., on a_ charge of disorderly conduct and was later identified as Saul | by Mrs. Lola Philpott Walker, who claimed she knew him in Franklin County In his boyhood days. She and others in Rockymount identified the prisoner as Saul by certain birthmarks and scars, The prisoner, although never indicted for the King killing, was brought before a grand jury and the State obtained a true bill on its showing that he was belleved to be Saul. Father Is Witness. ‘Witnesses were brought from Rock- ingham County several weeks ago, in- cluding Turner's father, two cousins, and a brother-in-law, and identified their kinsman. tember 25. Saul, who is yet to be found, is charged in Franklin County with having killed King near the home of a girl whom both visited. ‘The hearing brought a crowd that al- most_filled the court room. C. C. Lee, the commonwealth’'s attorney, was as- sisted in the hearing by H. N. Dillard, who was State’s attorney when the King killing occurred, while B. A. Davis, A. H. Hopkins and J. B. Allman represented the defendant. other persons were in the Rockingham party. Among those testifying were Miss Audrey Pugh of Bethesda (lower left) is holding the two eups which were awarded the Chevy Chase and Gaith- | Sheriff C. R. Fawley of Rockingham, Trial of the case on | the indictment was scheduled for Sep- | By the Associated Press. | SAN DIEGO, Calif., September 20.— | Ruth Alexander, aviatrix killed here | | Thursday on a projected one-stop flight. to New York, died of multiple injuries incurred when her plane fell because | of its overloaded condition and the in- [ tense fop, & coroner’s jury decided to- | ay. T. Claude Ryan, veteran fiyer and | builder of Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis, “would have hesitated to fly | | that morning,” he testified at the in- quest. Ryan was at the field when the avia- trix took the air on her last fiight. He estimated the ceiling at about 1,000 feet. “I think perhaps she climbed into the fog sooner than she expected,” said Ryan. “Flying blind with the heavily | loaded plane, losing speed in climbing, it may ‘stalled,’ gone into a steep | dive and crashed at terrific speed. If | she'd straightened out the ship just | before it struck the ground, the tre- mendous wind pressure might have | caused the wings to drop off. In | my opinion, the wings broke off in the air.” The gas load of 117 gallons carried was more than the ship was designed for, Ryan stated. P | “She was well aware she was tak- ing a chance and was willing to take it, Ryan sald. Mrs, Gertrude Kumm, a personal | friend of Mrs. Alexander, testified let- | ters found among the latter's effects | seeming to reveal a premonition of | death, were written before a flight to | Vancouver, British Columbia, and re- turn. The girl expected that flight to | | be_a hazardous one, the witness sald. g | GOTHAM FIGHTS NOISE | NEW YORK, September 20 (#).—The | | jumpy nerves of New York’s wary pe- | | destrians may soon be somewhat | soothed. | A special police anti-noise squad has | Ten witnesses and four | been designated to stop unnecessary | meet at sounding of automobile horns and | otherwise to enforce the anti-noise | | ordinance. For 10 days drivers will be | learns more about psychic conditions over there. | “One cannot expect him to learn everything all at once. One would not | expect persons who have only been sc- customed to working a simple wireless set to go over to Daventry (a powerful British wireless station) and take charge of such a huge station. “One has to learn gradusllv, and that is what Sir *Arthur is doing. Rut he Till have & message for the world before long. WOMAN IN NEBRASKA SENATORIAL RACE| Mrs. Beatrice Fenton Craig, Who Withdrew as Norris Opponent, Files as Independent. ‘ By the Associated Press. | LINCOLN, Nebr., September 20.—A | three-cornered contest loomed in Ne- braska today for the election of a United States Senator. \ | Mrs. Beatrice Fenton Craig, Lincoln | school teacher, who withdrew as an original opponent of Senator George W. Norris, filed a5 an independent Repub- can. ! She announced her decision to enter the race when the Republican State convention recently made a blanket in- dorsement, of the party candidates, in cluding Senator Norris. | The contest will be decided between Senator Norris, former Senator Gilbert | M. Hitchcock, Democratic nominee, and Mrs. Cralg. 9 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. \ TODAY. Hike over Civil War forts around | Washington, Red Triangle Outing Club, | Georgia avenue and Aspen | street, 2:30 pm. | Lecture, “Inner Awakening,” United Chief of Police F. L. Dovell of Harrison- | warned, then they will be summoned Lodge of Theow;lhi".l, Hill Building, | A fair rooter for the Chevy Chase company, Miss Mary Garrett (lower right) ringing the bell on its fire apparatus. | burg. Paul Rhinehart, prominent farmer | to court. | AUSTRALIA BACKS BUSINESS FAVORS " PEERLESS Seventeenth and I streets, 8:15 p.m. FURNITURE STORES taking advantage of those in drought | formation about his new life when he | stricken sections by charging ‘“doubl prices.” Secretary McLaughlin said he ad heard of no complaints of over-: charging. x Heaps was quoted as saying Eastern . buyers had heard they could get hay.. for $6 a ton in the stack, but that this price was raised. Secretary McLaugh- lin said he must be referring to alfalfa hay, and added: 1 formed, because I've never heard of al- falfa selling for as low as $6 a ton iny.: Nebraska. Right now it's worth $10s and with freight rates it would cost,. as much as $24 a ton delivered to farn« removed_sections. : “On the other hand. we have quoted | wild hay at as low as $5 & ton at pointa--~ rather remote from the railways,’ M McLaughlin said. Maryland buyers, he added, were-- eager to buy green alfala hay. “I'm positive that our farmers are. not making more than $1 per ton om. their hay over the normal market price, s, and 1 don't consider that is profiteer- . ing," Secretary McLaughlin stated. | Trinidad has launched & program for’ = extensive road development to relieve,”! unemployment and to increase cacao and banana production. FOR RENT 2 Rooms, Kitchen, Bath and Reception Room Electric Refrigeration Reasonable Rental THE ARGONNE 16th and Columbia Road N.W. Telephone National 5000 For immediate delivery of The Star to your home every evening and Sunday morning. The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, at the rate of 115 cents per day and 5 cents Sunday. ... tomorrow—we feature an event of great importance . . . without exception E F VERY of U URNITURE R-E-D-U-C-E-D! ITE tions SUITES! Your unrestricted choice! . every fine suite has been included in the drastic reduc- TOO MANY And, because we are forced to reduce stocks + . sharp price cuts have been made. AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY TO SECURE A FINE SUITE AT A GREAT SAVING! FOR EXAMPLE $109.50 3-Piece Overstuffed Suite, made with covering of heavy anteed. $186.00 3-Piece Bed-Davenport durable corduroy velour. inside loose reversible scat cushions verse side covered with a gorgeos Our sale price..... tapestry. Suite, beautiiul 84 Famous Marshall spring units, which have the re- !5 8.ul port, club chair and button-back chair covered with finest taupe velour in floral design, sagless bed spring inside davenport, all reversible spring-flled seat cushions and finest spring seat construction guaranteed, dried hardwood finished mahogany, $300.00. Our sale price...... 3 One of our very finest 3-Piece Living Room Frame is kiln 39 8m Suites with covering of genuine grade A mohair, im- ported moquette reverse on seat cushions which are filled with finest tempered steel spring units Non- | mission November 3 continued to be dismal, and that the almost universal | demand for holding a general confer- DAHLIA SHOW TO OPEN WITH LARGE DISPLAY warping hardwood frame finished in rich mahogany. sl 45_;, Fully guaranteed. Our sale price.... $165.1 Lovely 4-Pe. Bed Room Group, of finest woods and genuine walnut veneers. Large size dresser, 2-door ships to manufacturers which already | are beginning to be apparent. The | ence next year is none too optimistic in |president of one Canadian bank, though | | tone. | protectionist in principle, commented Prime Minister Scullin, who had just | that “Canada cannot afford to be dras- | arrived in Geneva from Australia on |tic on its tariff charges or volume of SMALL WEEKLY OR MONTHLY PAYMENTS Close-Out Baltimore Exhibit Will Require ;fll way to the British imperial con- erence, gave his discourse before the | 3,000 Feet of Commercial Space for All Classes. The annual State Dahlia and Fall | Flower Show of the Baltimore Dahlia | Bociety and the Garden Clubs of Mary- | land will be held tomorrow and Tues- | day at the Alcazar, Cathedral and | Madison streets, Baltimore, Md. The show will be open to the public on the first day from 5 p.m. until 10:30 p.m., and on the following day from 10:30 | a.m. until 10:00 p.m. There will be more than 100 competi- tive classes and approximately 3.000 feet of commercial dahlia displays, | which will include all releases of 1930 | novelties, both foreign and domestic. In addition to the dahlia there will be classes for gladiolus. The garden club classes will consist of annuals, peren- nials, fruits, rockeries, pools and many other novelties. Baltimore during 1929 was awarded | first as having the best dahlia ex- hibtion in the East, and the com- | mittees are planning to make the 1930 show the outstanding event, of the year. Members of garden clubs in this vicinity are cordially invited to partici- pate in this event. Entry blanks for the garden classes may be obtained from Mrs. Parker D. Dix, chairman, 841 West University Parkway, Baltimore, | Md., and for those desiring 1o compete | in the dahlia classes, entry blanks may be obtained from H. O. Aburn, secre- tary, Baltimore Dahlia Society, Blen- heim road, Baltimore, Md. Members of out-of-town garden clubs and dahlia societies are permitred to use thelr own 1930 membership cards as admission tickets, CONSTABLE IS NAMED Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md.. September 20.—Leo A. Gosnell has been appointed by the Prince Georges County Com- missioners a_constable for Plscataway District, to fill the unexpired term of George 5. Winters, deceased. Upon the petition of Henry Roth and Disarmament Committee, general de- bate in the Assembly having concluded ‘Tuesday. Wants Conference Soon. “The time has come,” he declared, “to adopt a method of settling disputes by law and not by war.” He urged the calling of a world dis- armament conference ‘very soon.” The Assembly Judicial Committee took measures today to meet the situa- tion created by failure of the protocol for revision of the World Court statute to come into force. Cuba's objection to its immediate effectiveness remains the chief ob- stacle, but more than 20 other States have not yet ratified. All except Cuba, however, has signified they will not op- pose its coming into force without the full ratification of all the states, as did Cuba. Election in Few Days. In view of the election of a full new bench, which the Assembly will hold in a few days, the committee agreed that 15 judges should be elected in- stead of the present 11: that a higher scale of salaries be adopted, and that a pension system for Court members be put tato operation. All of these are contained in the still inactive new statute, and are re- garded ' as necessary for successful functioning of the Court. The committee also adopted a reso- Jution asking ratification of the proto- col, from states which have not yet acted, as soon as possible. This is con- sidered to leave the way open for bring- ing the new statute into effect when- ever all ratifications have been re- ceived. SEATTLE PASTOR RESIGNS Congregation’s Birth Control Views Given as Reason. SEATTLE, Wash., September 20 (&), of his congregation viewed birth con- trol was a major reason for his act, Rev. John A. Staunton resigned here the certificates of Dr. ‘Daniel B. Sprecher and Dr. M. D. Norris, show- Fannie Roth to be insane, the com- missioners have ordered that she be confined in the Springfield State Hospi- tal for the Insane at the expense of igce Georges County. todpay as rector of St. Michael's Epis- copal mission. He will leave tonight for Notre Dame University, South Bend, Ind., where he is to become a member of the faculty. He held the mission post here five years. ” —Declaring the favor with which part | trade will suffer.” Agriculturists Score Tariff. This enthusiasm does not extend to | | the agriculturists of Canada. The sec- |retary of the United Farmers of On- | |tario” complained that the Bennett budget has “ignored the farmer.” duties on butter are applauded by dairy- | | men generally, but the 75 cents a ton | duty on potatoes is not expected to help materially. | | Consolidation of Western low tariff | | sentiment, growing out of the recent | changes, is expected by the president of |the United Parmers of Saskatchewan ' The independent, farmer members of the West, protested vigorously in the Holse against additional burdens in the form of higher implement and clothing | prices being laid on their shoulders | | while in the midst of a stern struggle | |for economic extension of the world market. Stimulation of the industrial regions of Ontario and Quebec at the expense of industries such as pulp and paper, metals and wheat farming, which depend on export sales. is predicted by | some prominent Canadian economists. | U. S. Branches Are Expecled. | 'The opening of branch factories in Canada by farm implement manufac- | turers of the United States, who will be shut out from the Canadian market by | virtue of the tariff, is generally ex- pected. Similar action by boot and shoe manufacturers and glass makers | is anticipated The tariff increases announced this | week admittedly are emergency changes, | | hastily made, and the government is | pledged to undertake a complete re- | vision of tariff schedules at the next | regular session of Parliament, opening | | probably next February. This almost | inevitably entalls an_extension of the | present increases. About 150 out of 1,100 items were dealt with this week, | only two items being revised downward. | That the government selected 150 of the | most significant items, however, is shown | by the fact that some $300,000,000 out | of a total of $960,000,000 of imports | were affected by this week's changes. | R. B. Bennett, prime minister, is said | to aspire to increase tariffs affecting | some $600,000,000 of imports annually, | which suggests a revision next Winter |at least as important as the present one. (Copyright, 1930.) Most species of hawks are valuable | assistants to farmers and game breed- | ers, especially the red-shouldered, red- tailed and broad-winged kinds, which fed malnly on destructive rodents. ‘The | | D. C. Mother Knew Best mothers find the things | 1 keep children contented, happy, well. Most of them have learned they can depend on one thing to restore a youngster's good nature when he's cross, fretful, upset. The experience of Mrs. L..J. Grant, 901 G SL, S. E., Washington, is a typical one. She says: “I have used California Fig Syrup with Howard and Frank -for. quite some time. Whenever they're the least bit con- stipated or restless 1 give them a little. It has them comfortable, happy, well in a jiffy. Their splendid condition proves I knew best when I decided to use this wonderful preparation with them.” Physicians endorse the use of pure vegetable California Fig Syrup when bad breath, coated tongue, dullness, feverishness, listlessness, elc., show a child’s bowels are in need of help. Weak stomach and bowels are toned by its gentle aid; appelite increased; digestion and assimilation are so assisted that weak, undernourished children quickly improve in weight, strength and energy. ‘The genuine always bears the word California. So look for that when buying. All drugstores have it chifforobe, French vanity dresser and CALIFORNI FI SYRUP LAXATIVE-TONIC for CHILDREN - SPECIALS $19.50 9x12 Brussels Tapestry Rugs, of good quality. Your choice of many $¢).65 patterns. $27.50 Oak Kitchen Cabinet, with all modern features, sliding nickel top and full set of glassware in- § 1 9.55 cluded . $9.75 45-Inch Davenport Table, made of hardwood richly fnished in 33.11 brown mahogany..... $2 to $5 Cash and Carry Items, mahogany end tables, table lamps, table scarfs, metal book ends and Rl e . e $19.50 5-Pe. Unfinished Breakfast Sulte, hardwood drop-leaf table and 4 Windsor style chairs, all sanded and $gQ.88 ready to paint... $19.35 Simmons Double Day Bed, complete with cretonne covered mattress with ruffie. Opens o' tull size § 7 ~.18 wastaaris BEDS & BEDDIN S G SPECIALS Unusual Values. . .Everyone From Our Regular Stock $15.00 Simmons Walnut Beds, 2-inch continuous style; all sizes $10.95 L 85 f r ol e85 or you! d $5.95 $29.50 Famous Inner Coil Spring- Filled Mattress, 10-yr. guarantee. Hundreds of finest coil units and pure layer felt. Fine damask covering. All_sizes $14.88 $19.88. Less $5 for your old mattress. . Metal post Easy Terms Small Weekly or Monthly Payments $13.75 Extra Heavy Roll-Edge Mattress, of pure cotton, excel- lent grade covering; ail sizes $10.98. Less $5 for = your old mattress. .. 5.98 $14.75 Simmons 10-yr. Guaranteed Coil Springs, 90 highly resilient coils of oil-tempered steel wire. All sizes $11.40. Less $5 for your old spring 36.4‘0 $19.50 50-1b. Roll-Edge Mattress, of pure layer felt, covered with grade A ticking. All sizes $14.89. Less 85 for your old @@ 8Q mattress . $20.50 100-Pc. Dinner Sets, of hinaware, tastefully deco- Tated | in’ biue $12.75 and gold four poster bed. and fully guaranteed. Hand-rubbed finish cabinet work Our sale § expert 75 price . $265.00 ful Room Suite, ul Venetian Mirror Bed large size dresser, full length Hollywood vanity dresser, new style chifforobe and poster bed, made of genuine 2-tone burl walnut veneers with maple overlays. Heavy Prench plate glass mirrors on dresser and van! work guaranteed. sale $138.50 Seven-Piece Dinetie Suite, ity. Finest cabinet Our 3131.50 price of genuine walnut veneer, all hand-rub- bed canopy polished _tops. top 45-inch buffet, china cabinet, extension dinette table with leaf and 4 chairs with upholstered seats. Fin- * est teed. Our sale price o $198.75 Magnificent 10-Pe. te, made of shaded Aj nut, ern cabinet work guaran- 383.75 ining Room merican wal- veneers. A 60-inch buffet, mod- china closet with bottom drawer, server, extension table and set of six beautiful chairs with upholstered seats. Expert cabinet work makes this value. sulte a stand-out § Our sale price. ... 114" STORES Main Store, 827-829 7th St. N.W. Store No. 2, 1213 Good Hope Road S.E.