Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SUNDAY Ash Furnace Tools Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. NA. 1964 Cans nd ANCHOR BAR TEETH BEST_FOR 15 YEARS LOOK NATURAL Guaranteed 1o Fit Tight Crown and Bridgework $5, QUUUD 5. Per tooth Teeth Extracted. £1.00; with Gas. §2 Plates Repaired While You Walt, $1.50 DR. LEHMAN 406 Seventh Street Over Woulworth’s & wad 10 Subscribe Today It costs only about 1% cents per day and 5 cents Sundays to have Washington's best newspa- per delivered to you regularly gvery evening and Sunday mom- ing. Telephone National 5000 and the delivery <ill start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- lect at the nd of each month. Reasons Why You Should Use Cuticura Soap 1. Tt ie pure and you should use the best for daily toilet use. 2. It helps to make and keep the skin clear and healthy. 3. It contains medicinal proper- ties eo is excellent for skin . troubles. 4. Tt keeps baby 5. It is excellent for shampooing the hair. skin healthy. Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. and S0c. Taleum 25c. Proprictors: Potter Drag & Chemical Cerporstion, Malden, Mase. Capital Boy is Rewarded HEN children are weak and run-down, they are e: to colds or children’s diseases. never wise to neglect those weaken- ing and depressing symptoms, such as bad breath, coated tongue, fretful- ness, feverishness, biliousness, lack of energy and appelite, etc. Nine times out of ten these things ant to one trouble—constipation. fothers all around you are coming right out in public to tell how their children are being relieved of this trouble by California Fig Syrup. Mrs. Clarence E. Kitts, of 8211 ve St., S. E., Washington, ‘Our doctor told me about California Fig Syrup, so I knew what to give Clarence when I saw by his bad breath and coated tongue that he vas constipated. “He has been more than rewarded for taking Fig Syrup. It made him a wwell, happy boy promptly. He never complains of any symptoms of con- stipation now.” The genuine, endorsed by doctors vears, always bears the word a. All drugstores. for Frankly, we have too many pianos now in stock. Of course, we would like to sell piano in the sale will be sacrificed at a price almost unbelievable. The slashing reductions on Grands, Players, Uprights should cause 1/ Exclusive Organization Form- ANCIENT LONDON ed to Encourage Com- position of Glees. LONDON, October 4 (NANA)— One of the most ancicnt and least known of London clubs is the Noble- | men and Gentlemen's Catch Club, founded in 1761 by the fourth Earl of g | Prince Ludwig Fond Sports and Is Widely Traveled. of Member of Troupe at Nation- al Theater Is Married Man of 39. BY GRETCHEN SMITH. | STAR, WASHINGTON. MIDGET ACTOR FINDS BABY GOLF |LONDON THEATRICAL | | AND LITTLE AUTO RIGHT FOR HIM CLUBLEAST KNOWN D. C, OCTOBER 5, 1930—PART ONE. the Queen's, With |to play the part of Queenie. She liter- Cedric Hardwicke, such a fine King |ally runs away with every scene in Magnus, as Elizabeth’s tyrannical fath- | which she appears and has become the er Gwen Frangeon Davies as Elizabeth | darling of the company. and Scott Sunderland as the poet: & | (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- new Delilah piece in which Edith | Aper Alllance) Evans plays the title part and makes i) her debut in management, and a new oo e Leave I to| Endurance Flyers Forc:ed Do;l:. Psmith,” at the Shaftesbury. GLENDALE, Calif., October 4 (®).— dotted with naval craft a r Mrests George Moore's play, based on his| The third attempt of Loren Mendell .., o4 o ) c».cm:d l;:om the book, “The Brook Kerith,” is an eager- (and Peter Reinhart to regain the, y bluej Iy awaited event at the Little Art Thea- | World's endurance flight record failed | Scouting Fleet of destroyer squadrons ter Club, though there is no chance | yesterday. The ship, “The Pride of | which arrived this morning from New- of this piece being licensed for public | Hollywood,” was forced down here at| port, R. I has brought to FLEET AT CHARLESTON Harbor Dotted With Craft Which Will Hold Target Practice. CHARLESTON, S. C., October 4 (®).—Charleston's harbor today was SEASON PROMISING Noel Coward's Witty Comedy, Fea- | turing Himself and Gertrude Law- rence, Among New Plays. LONDON, October 4 (N.AN.A) noon after being in the air 66 hours The fleet will be based here until | The Autumn theatrical season, whic! has opened very successfully, promises | to be an interesting one. | Among the new plays already | 1aunched are Noel Coward’s witty new | comedy, with a cast of only four peo- | ple and including himself and Gertrude | Lawrence, which opened the new | Phoenix Theater; Rudolf Besier's in- | teresting plece cn the love story of the Brownings—“The Barrets of Wim- | pole Street”"—which Sir Barry Jackson presentation as Christ is one of the principal characters. Elmer Rice's “Street Scene,” has set- tled down with great success, and all London seems to be flocking to this realistic slice of New York life. | Americ: | piece T i | most popular member of the cast is un- doubteciy Peggy of Battersea, the dog of extremely doubtful ancestry, who was rescued from an untimely death and 23 minutes. They reported a piece of canvas housing motor ofl heater blew over the air intake, choking the motor. The Climate Columbus January 8 for target practice, drills and The cruiser Concord, flag- ship of Admiral W. R. Sexton; 2 tenders and 26 destroyers are in port. maneuvers. Sandwich for the enc gement of the | composition and mances of | canons, catches and gle The club is exclusise. it had only eight membe: d never | has it had more than 37. First of all, | there was no entrance fee nor subscrip- | tion, the income being derived from | | fines for absence, for noy taking the | chair and one-half of 1 per cent of any increase of income enjoyed by members. Musical composition w1 originally en- couraged among members by the award of prizes, but nowadays such an in- centive is not thought necessary, and the last prize was presented in 1881 to | Montem Smith. | "'The procedure at the weekly meet- o begin with The losely introduction of miniature golf, followed by the appearance of & itian car on the automobile mar- ket, i1ns opened up a new world of plea; ure to the “midget prople.’ “Prince” Ludwig Mehs, in Washing- ton with the theatrical company which played at the National Theater, has taken up Tom Thumb golf with as much enthusiasm as the business man plays his 18 holes. His cyes twinkling, the “prince” as he is known in the theatrical world, ex- claimed, “that game was just made for Despite the fact that there is only 44 | inches of him, which barely tip the scales at 55 pounds, Prince Ludwig has | ings of the club is interesting. After | dinner, the grace, “Non Nobis Domine,” i by Byrd, and “Th by Dr. Cooke, | 1 loyal toasts “The Catch Club | hereof,” honored by, ed. pon the e time an professional sin The president call president and each member and guest on the rignt and left of him in turn to name a glee, and the vice president calls on_each in the same order for a | toast No one but the president and | vice president has the privilege of call- | ing a glee unless he fakes part in it. | King George IV, then Prince of Wales, | was elected a member of the club in | 1786, and invariably took his call and | sang his glee. The Duke of Cambridge, | who joined in 1807, attended to the last vear of his life and seldom omitted his call, his favorite being Webbe's “Glori- ous’ Apollo.” Over 200 pepple have won prizes at the club, among them being Dr. Arne, Dr. Alcock, Dr. B. Cooke and Earl | Beauchamp, and many glees originating | there have since became exceedingly | popular. (Copyright, 1930. by North paper Allianc on the vie American News- e |CONFUSION OF NAMES - | BAFFLES ALL LONDON| Prime Minister's Daughter and Dance Teacher Find Difficulties in Having Same Name. By the Associated Press. | MacDonald, daughter of the minister, has become participant in a comegy of errors There is another Miss Ishbel Mac- | Donald in London ~whose newspaper | advertisement as teacher of dancing is bringing unwanted correspondence to 10 Downing Street, where the Miss Ishbel America knows presides in her father’s household. The confusion has been intensified because the dancer Miss Ishbel, who is connected with the Scottish Dance Club in London, also is assistant mistress of one of the London County Council's schools, and writes the letters “L. C. C.” after her name. People reading the advertisement and recalling that the prime minister’s daughter is a member of the London | County Council have poured con- | gratulations upon her for her ex- | traordinary vitality in being able to add teaching and dancing to her strenuous duties as hostess of the Downing street establishment, She told the Herald today that she prime an_ unwilling “ confusion. HOOVER SPEECH PRAISEDi President Green of A. F. L. Com-| | ments on Unemployment Feature. | BOSTON, October 4 (#).—William Gueen, president of the American Fed- | eration of Labor, in an interview with newspaper men yesterday, commended that part of President Hoover's Cleve- | land address dealing with unemploy-| ment. | “President Hoover's address,” Green | said, * “was timely. I can subscribe to that part of it which rebuked the dis- | cussion that aimed at a lowering of American living standards. The Presi dent’s defense and championing of an increasing standard of living for the people of this country was a distinctiv contribution toward our unemployment problem. O AVIATRIX REACHES U. S. NEW YORK, October 4 (#)—Mrs, Spencer Cleaver, daughter of Hugh Pol lock, minister of finance and deputy prime minister of Northern Ireland, arrived on the liner Berengaria yester- day, preparatory to a “pleasure” flight | to Los Angeles. Mrs. Cleaver was one of 21 pilots | who flew light planes in a tour of Cen- pe last year. She said her was opposed to her flying in America, but her husband, head of a London department store, had no ol Her plane, a de Haviland Gyps Moth, will arrive next week on the liner Majestic. them. Some new, some used | time to read book:, | LONDON, October ' 4.—Miss Ishbel | ¢ been able to carve out a pretty big slice of the world's pleasures and interests Attired in a natty blue suit. a pair of jaunty spats showing beneath his well creased trousers, the prince arrived at the manager’s office to receive his inter- viewers. The sight of seven tiny men “trying out” a diminutive car recent placed on the market, prompted ques tioning on the subject of motoring To Drive Own Car. The prince, who is a lover of sports, including horse racing and fishing, is e astic over the possibilities of a | e made possble for “the little | y the newly introduced auto- | “PRINCE” LUDWIG MEHS. | s | wese ot of mormal statire. His two brothers and two sisters are equally normal Seven years ago Prince Ludwig mar- ried Mi Elizabeth Hoy, also a _midget, mobile. who was one of the “Three Ho)d' S‘L?- “Soon I expect to drive my own car,” | ters.” featured on the same vaudeville he said, “At Present the reach Is too | Program with Prince Ludwfg. This lit- long for us and the seat too high, but | tle lady is exactly the size of her I understand that can easily be ad- | husband and is an accomplished dancer. Justed.” | Prince Ludwig, who was born in | Thuringen, Germany, 39 -years ago, speaks English well, although with a quaint accent. | “That is the hardest part of your | language,” he remarked, ‘“the pro- nunciation. No, I didn’t speak a word of English when I arrived here 16 years ago, and reading has been my method of learning the language. I love to read,” he added. “I don’t have much | but I read every thing in the papers and pericdicals. I like particularly foreign news, about political condition in other countries.” Political Unrest Discounted. Prince Ludwig discounts reports of Germany’s political unrest. “No,” he remarked, shaking his small head em- phatically, “I don't think there will ever be a revolution in Germany. The people are too level-headed. If some smart_fellow tries to start something he won't get far. There will always be somebody stronger who will stop people THE ARGONNE 16th and Columbia Road N.W. Living Room, Dining Room, Bed Room, Kitchen and Bath ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION Before the little actor came to this country he had toured practically every country in Europe with a Lilliputian troupe. St. Petersburg in imperial day: Paris, London, Brussels and the cities of Belgium and Holland, all have been visited in this day by this much-traveled little man. Since his arrival in the United States an- other country has been added to his list of compiete tours, as there is no spot between Maine and Florida, across country to the West Coast, that Prince | Ludwig does not know. i In Washington the prince has given considerable attention to the Capitol | and other public buildings. Educated | to be an architect by his father, a con- tractor of Thuringen, Prince Ludwig \S‘ still susceptible to the beauty of archi- tecture. “I like to draw, but T early realized that as a midget my best future lay in) the theatrical world,” he explained. .| Prince_Lud: mother_and_fathe was trying to do something to end the | o ) BringNeantytnYomG;rden Special Offer for Fall Planting This Offer Good for 1 Week Get Yours Whi Good | ¥ Juniper Comminis i Fall Is Best Time to Plant | to 8 years old twice trans. | ich means ood rooty stems. LAl | | fresh from our ach || 3 times transplanted 2 for %1.10 Pink KAHN on 7th Established 33 Years St. Established 33 Years Specials Monday and Tuesday Genuine Toric Glasses Far or Near Complete With Shell or Metal Frame 3. 50 Complete Outfit, With é&se and Cleaner Included Genuine Toric KRYPTOK Invisible Bifocal First and best quality. Toric Kryptok Bifocal Lenses (one pair to see near and far). Best lenses made. Sold regularly $15. Special price Monday and Tuesday . ... Lenses 7 50 ~KAHN OPTICAL CO. 617 Seventh St. N.W. Between F and G Streets ate Wrote Home About! A Three Day Week-End Columbus Day falls on Sunday... which entitles you to Monday. ..and you can come Friday. . . Columbus took three ships and you can take three days...three days of racing seas and bracing air . . . three sumptuous nights to catch up on your sleep . . . half a week of a climate that Columbus sailed ten weeks to find! Bring Your Family! Ve \f‘('\’DQ/Y]\/ N 1) Nl Selected Group of the Finest and M@ Repres CHALFONTE-HADDON HALL-A-E MARLBOROUG! KNICKERBOCKER-A-E ST.CHARLES-A-E ‘WILTSHIRE-A-E LAFAYETTE-A SEASIDE-A-E BRIGHTON-A DENNIS-A TRAYMORE-A-E GLASLYN-CHATHAM-A MORTON-A SHELBURNE-E E—European Plan A-E—Both Plans] > [A—American Plan - Kindly Write for Rates and Reservations © corvaicurEn, ¥. 1. 7., 1930 there - L I J e oo« Why not hear them ALL? Do you realize the big money paid to the talent now entertaining radio listeners? Do you know that two famous humorists are paid $100,000 a year merely for their ability to make people laugh? That a famous orchestra gets $3,000 an hour for broadcasting dance music? That the talent alone for some of the weekly “chains” has cost as high as $60,000 for a one. FREE-Bargain Catalog Add 15¢ for Packing and Insurance owMatket Perennial Ga:'de’t’ls\,> ANDOLPH ROAD —— ow Market ——NewJersey | | | 1 bhour’s broadcast? Authorities say the coming winter’s music will be the finest ever yet broadcast. Buf, how much you enjoy these programs will depend on how well your radio reproduces them. For some radio sets do not have full tone range. Their capacity for reproduction is thus limited. High notes, or low notes, or perhaps both, are . without least obli, instruments. Every F many to be sold immediately. All pianos nct sold outright will be placed in the homes of familiesinterested in owning a piano in the immediate future, particularly homes where there are children. You must call at the store to file your request. Positively No Charge O0f Any Kind We, of course, reserve the right to select the homes in which the pianos are to be placed and they may be used indefinitely until we need them. CHAS. M. STIEFF, INC. Open Evenings Copyright, 1930, L. C. Gorsuch. 1340 G Street N.W. \ But when you buy a new Stewart-Warner Radio, you hear all the voices! You buy engineering skill that has made scientific provision for full tone range. So delicately attuned is this supersensitive set that it reproduces @/ the notes, high and low. Every instrument, every voice, can be heard in its exact natural proportion to all the others. These splendid sets incorporate every proved worth-while feature known to the industry. They are the result of 25 years’experience in the manu- facture of guality electrical precision instruments. None can give finer reception. TODAY! GO TO YOUR NEAREST DEALER — and let him demonstrate these amazing new sets— ation to you. See and hear them! Not> how much clearer, more realistic, are the fones. Note the impressive beauty of the four splendid new Period design models now on display. And finally note the prices—the easy terms! Abso- lutely the most outstanding Radio values on the market. Don’t delay. Go at once. See the sets with full tone range! If you don’t know your dealer’s name, write or phone us. STEWART-WARNER SALES CO. 16 D St. N.W. STEWART-WARNE Lincoln 9792 RADIO “A GREAT RADIO BACKED BY A GREAT v lost. Gone are the overtones, the lifelike reality. The most exquisite harmonies flatten out. You might as well listen to a choir with some of the singers silent. The "Raphacl” Consols A stunnifig Console moclel of Italian Renaissance influ- ence. Top and sides of Amer- ican walnus. The front panel of solid mahogany — with genuine wood carvings in the typical leaf motif of this period. One of Four Splendid PERIOD DESIGN MODELS Incorporating every advanced, proved worth-while feature — yet priced at only *99.75 to *197.50 (Less tubes) Asmall down payment puts one of these beautiful sets in your home immediately. NAME”