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2001 16th St. N.W. 3 Rooms, Kitchen and Bath ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION e irens, Bl Covers. made " Somtte sultes and § cuchions for $16.50. in. - “Write_or Phone R. L. ISHERWOOD, Lin. 5350. 13 | Don’t Endure Slipping ' FALSE TEETH teeth drop or slip when augh or sueeze? Don't embarrased a minute a new powder to Do _your false ou No gummy. €00ey; Get Fasteeth Peopies or any other ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. & La. Ave. NW. 65th Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments James F. Shea Secretary James E. Connelly President 4| In announcing the dates, Henry P. Enamel DO OVER your kitchen out- fit, your breakfast set or porch furniture with this 4- hour enamel. Hard surface. Comes in a variety of good colors. 607-609 C St. Telephone Metropolitan 0151 Est. 2: Yurn’ | Tribby’s 615 15th St. | Next to Kflll'l Back Home Excursion From Washington to Points in North Carolina South Carolina Georgia Florida Alabama On Sale October 4th Return Limit, October 24th STOP OVERS ALLOWED bty X il F. E. Masi, D. P. A, 1418 H St. N.W. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad AN INFALLIBLE SIGN of a disordered condition within ; s3: white-coated tongue with bad breath, and a bad taste. || the commission finds necessary to TARIFF HEARINGS PLANNED BY BOARD Hoover Commission to Con- sider Eleven Articles in HaWley-Smoot Act. | By the Associated Press. ‘The Hoover Tariff Commission an- | nounced yesterday public hearings |would be held within the next two | months on 11 articles in the Hawley- |Smoot act, including many which |stirred up long controversies in the | Senatey ‘The hearings, under the flexible pro- vision, were ordered by the Senate. A | majority of the articies affected -were |given increased rates in the new tariff fiaua and production cost inquiries were | asked, in most instances, by Democratic | Senators, with the claim that the find- |ing would show reductions justified. Hearing Dates Announced. { ‘The hearing dates and the articles involved follow: October 28, straw | hats; 30, pig iron; November 5, woven- | wire fencing and wire netting; 6, ultra marine blue; 7, smokers’ articles; 11, pigskin leather; 12, maple sugar and | maple sirup; 13, wood flour; 14, wool | felt hats; 18, wool floor coverings not | specially provided for, and November 119, wood furniture. | Fletcher, the new Republican chairman, | told newspaper men in his first inter- view that although determination of the hearings before & preliminary state- ment of information had been furnished | manufaeturers and importers represent- |ed a change in old commission practices, this did not necessarily mean such a policy would be continued. “We believed,” he explained, “we | | were in such shape that we could go | ahead with public hearings.” | Additional Hearings Possible. | He added that the old commission had turned over to the new one many facts on the 11 articles, and if sufficient evidence were not adduced at the hear- ings to warrant a rate recommendation r the President, further investigations ;‘ould be made and additional hearings | eld. Under the new law, whatever x'nesl equalize production costs here and | abroad must either be accepted by the | President or given & pocket veto. The flexible provisions of the Fordney-Mc- Cumber act, which the Smoot-Hawley |law displaced, permitted the President to proclaim a different increase or de- crease from that proposed by the com- mission as long as it did not exceed 50 per cent. This limitation is retained |in the present law, but applies to the commission alone. Proposed Changes Studied. Fletcher said the commission was studying pre ed changes in procedure, but had not finally determined upon any thus far. Pending appointment of the sixth ‘member of the commission, he said no vital steps, such as rate recommenda- tions or important personnel appoint- ments, would be taken. Fletcher would not predict whether the flexible clause investigations would be speeded up under the new law, but said the ml?x“’cm hoped to accelerate Confessed Slaying Is Probed. | BARERSFIELD, Calif., September 24 | | (@ —John Bender, 49, was held for in- vestigation Monday night after a pur- ported statement confessing the murder of & man and woman on a buchpgfin | ice quoted Bender as saying he stabbed Francis Conlon and Lois Marion Kentle, Bender may be the ened mind, police believed, but con- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C WORK ON COLORADO RIVER DAM STARTED g WEDNESDAY Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior, driving the last spike on the railroad from Las Vegas, Nev., to the site of the Hoover Dam. The spike, made of silver, signalized beginning of construction work on the $165,000,000 Colorado River project. Left to ri gh bur and Senator Shortridge (holding hat). -~ t: Representative William Eaton of Colorade, Senator Key Pittman of Nevada, Secretary Wil- —A. P. Photo. URGES ‘PLAN TO RESTORE WHITE BREAD TO FAVOR Bruce Barton Tells Bakers Farm Board Should Make Nation-Wide Advertising Campaign. By the Assoclated Press. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, September 24.—Bruce Barton, New York advertis- ing man and writer, urged before the American Bakers’' Association yesterday a Nation-wide advertising campaign by kind of newspaper advertising, spon- sored by the Farm Board, would go far toward restoring bread to its old place of honor and importance in the family diet. “In conducting such a campaign the Government would be merely making reparation for the blow dealt to the business of the wheat grower, the miller | and the baker by propaganda to dimin- ish wheat consumption in the war.” Judicial institutions arose in human soclety because law was the only science in which expertness was recognized at that early date. tinued their questioning after he hinted knowledge of the crime. the Federal Farm Board to restore white bread to-its place in the American diet. “We have 130,000,000 people in the United States,” said Mr. Barton, “and 130,000,000 too many bushels of wheat. ‘The Government proved in the war that its influence was sufficient to cut down the consumption of wheat. Why should that influence not be exerted now to build up the consumption? “The propaganda of the Food Ad- ministration persuaded us to make a 20 per cent cut in our use. The right Just Think of It— ‘The Star delivered to your door every evening and Sunday morning at 13c per day and 5c Sunday. Can you afford to be without this service at this cost? Telephone National 5000 and de- livery will start at once. WORKMEN OF WELDIT CO. WELDING THE TAIL ON BUFFALO, AT QST BRIDGE. —DR-A-BEAR. WHEN IT COMES T0 WELD- ————ING.WE ARE THERE. STITCH in TIME, Saves Nine—Old, but it fits in on the modern auto fender. A 75c weld in that small crack may prevent it going to pieces, besides it stops that much rattle. Bumpers, $1.50; Chevrolet engine heads exchanged, $4.50, etc. WELD it and save money and time. Weldit Co., 516 First St. N.W. Metropolitan 2416 Fresh Yeast Will Do It al FAITHFULNESS IN EATING YEAST tones up digestive organs and brings keen appeti ; by normal means: Adopt the treatment and see what improvement two months bring: Glider Damaged in Test. ELMIRA, N. Y., September 24 (#).— While there were no contest flights in the national glider contest here Mon- day because of insufficient wind, there were a number of test flights. In one of these the glider of A. P. Artran of Ypsilanti, Mich., was badly damaged. A wing struck the ground. 1332 G St. N.W. Phone District 2343 intestines clean with yeass SEPTEMBER 24, 1930. ALMA RUBENS, FILM STAR MAY DIVORCE HUSBAND Announces Suit Will Be Filed for Separation From Ricardo Cor- . Actor Charging Desertion. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, September 24.—Alma Rubens, motion picture ac to seek a divorce from Rmmmm screen actor. She said the suit to be filed in Los Angeles would charge desertion. She act. . Miss Rubens said she would ask no alimony but would demand counsel fees. However, if no satisfactory settle- ment is made of two pleces of Holly- wood property jointly owned, she said she would institute suit for possession, contending she paid the $50,000 for the property. 3 Rooms, Kitchen $65.00 THE MONTANA 1726 M St. N.W. 1748 Columbia Road Phone Columbia 0720 ‘THIS IS WHERE 90% of our common ills begin. Keep and your whole body benefitss Lok at your TONGUE...Zs it COATED ? MEMBER the kindly old family doctor who used to come to see you when you ‘were a youngster? Remember his first words, his first step in finding out what it was kept you from play? =All right now,” he’d boom.” “Let’s see that tongue of yours!” We've come a long way from the simple methods of the old family physician. But that simple test still tells its tale. The coated tongue is still a sign of internal disorder. Andtheamazing thingis this: Many ofus,even when we think we are well, find our tongues white when we look at them in a mirror. ng“m Why? Because of Intestinal Fatigue! Many of us suffer from it. Miss perfect health be- cause of it. ”» In Intestinal Fatigue, foodstuffs from which nutritive elements have been extracted clog the intestines. This waste stagnates. Poisons form and flood the system because elimination is irregular. We lose appetite, lack energy. That’s almost the first symptom of INTESTINAL FATIGUE. . . a serious condition that cayses 0% of our commonest ailments Stay “‘below par” as a result of it. Science, however, has found an answer. Fresh yeast . . . such as Fleischmann’s Yeast..: loosens and’'moistens accumulated waste mat- ter. It stimulates both digestion and nutrition. It fosters normal action of the intestines. Steadily and slowly it brings back: clear skin, renewed appetite, fresh vigor : : : it cleans, tones and revives the sluggish intestinal and digestive tracts: Yeast is neither for 75 years. It a cure-all nor a recent fad. It has been in use is recommended by leading specialists the world over. They tell patients, “Eat yeast regularly: : three times a day, before or between meals: grocery, restaura: 2. Hletschmanns Yeast is ¢¢éeallfi fawl thousands eat Keep at it. Don’t expect to correct, overnight, troubles that have been developing for years.” Surely there’s sound advice. It's worth try- ing. Just ask for Fleischmann’s Yeast at any nt, soda fountain. Every cake is rich in three vitamins important to health —vitamins B and G and the “sunshine” yita- min D. Directions on label: Free Parking Space for Customers’ , Autos—E St. Between 6th and 7th THE HECHT CO. . F Street at 7th The Same Man! The Same Dog! o i R i o . Vastly Better 'WORSTED-TEX No other suit is like Worsted-tex. It is as individual as the Washington Monu- ment. It always was one of the best suits in America for $40. This year, we think, it is the best suit in America for $40. Wonders have been done with the fab- ric. Vastly improved. Richer . . sturdier ., . . more to it than ever before, And the improvements are carried on through the making, the styling and the finishing. A suit that's styled for every man., Young or old. In college or in the busi- ness world. Beautiful browns, greys and blues . . . in plain shades or patterns. Direct Elevators to the Men's Clothing Departient —Second Floor Knit-tex Topcoats for Men, $30