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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1930. - SEED OPERATIONS | = o o e o ot Tl bsven ot tnd CHADBOURNE SILENT |3 Siinnd e Sar et | BRITISH'S WAR BOOK J:::.'.: i °{.&:‘ &; iy T 30 S o tenaoe, o SETS INITIAL SALE MARK | & snonyvonsly pubined i, m e A The Trade Commissior TOLD TRADE BODY [zt o ,,. iy Y S S| ON GUBA SUGAR DEAL |y e Yo o e vy : -twm', -'xked flish o acm.rl'l'ymn e % ‘h Rter: (i | Dyer. e fol n"wfi?—.: = Mancheon with ‘the Cubay | Memoirs of an Infantry Offcer,” | ot d, - £ Co by Siegtried Sassoon, Follows |Kent. where he lives and wo eed | Head of Stabilizing Group Refuses h 8 are few pe':gl thouxh wh (Copyrisht, xuo. " “ u‘ " W. ¥. Marsh. of North Carolina- said, was 1 to ! b; “mg prlce of the mfllh ¢ represented. rtise e; u " uould wu.hdr aw (mm the immediate Earlier Success. have so m devo Virginid Association Desoribes c5timat ol z e iee as the; Comment on Proposed Marketing | FOuC, more 'than ‘s million tons ot — Cottan Product Marketing. mnrkef.ed tn uuxlxt d{n cndent buyers. buyer and the wummgwn oll & Fer- Plan for Surplis, lus and DON, October 10 (NANA)— 0 - s surpl ts | LONI St | e 00 o8 ' el 2 c ot o 17 | sired Sumon, vhowe ez o| 0@ @ GO0 0O OO OSSOV rize M viously announced, thre re-esf By, the Assoclated Press, hel smm of Water B‘d By the Assoclated P he glu ted market. mry of the Not nh Ctmlln tal Virginia division of the National Seed | Hi tl Rac] , N. C,, October 10.—W. $ plied Mr. gidrs.. Rachel e ,ombex Thomas L. il en nome fo; anth urpom England, who rece Cha of the Cuban-Amer-| A wedding ring lost 27 years ago e was g Shun - Dicthany, s ncver seen the ican Sugar Commlsslon, Wednesdsy [yrie M manister. L“E;MPW_“E;’ Te ldlnzmny < s. M. Bannister af | Tee e fich had not been i 1 t i’ aviasion contiuies 0. 1n- | prceisen: eporis the ion | England, has just been found by work- mmiss| crease in Argentin. D e, which 1t seskiiy 10 Mive Cubs's | men n & sewer pipe. cv : R HEAD 1If THE inprice. Putthem GLUTTON THAT EATY (00" 0000 UP THE DIFFERENCE... difference be- tween a Bell garment at $22.50 and any other man’s fine wool suit that sells for $45, then, we have’nt learned anything about the clothing business in 14 years. And the only “bunk” about that statement is the fact that it is something for every man to “sleep-over”. We make our own clothes and our clothes are making a reputation ' ce is largely credited to our policy of no ' gives you Bell C three good rea -save the rest. ( because style and character are put mtb Bell Clothes as they ; m put mto aII ood clothes; noqu ever got anythmg out of the same perfect fit. the dlfference in prlc condition to put more value into Bell Clothes because the se- cret of Bell Clothes lies not in the profit on one garment but in the small profit on all the garments Bell can sell. Small profits, many sales, that’s the thing; greater value makes the register ring. Bell’s after volume and you are after value-—insepa- rable economic necessities that go hand in hand; Bell Clothes represent value plus - - - put 'em side by side, take ’em BELL CLOTHE‘ | stitch by stitch - - - - - we meet 9'6 F;‘I’REET 1|5 I4 ITREET ‘the trial without wincing be- ~ worTwwesT NORTHWEST cause we know the proof’s 94|Ng,5_=ug.rAv=. convincing. - g gl G Fvery Girl Deserves a Diamond There isn't a girl in America who shouldn’t have a diamond! The wearing of a fine ring has always been an example of good taste—and we think every American girl has that. CASTELBERG'S, America’s Oldest Credit Jewelers, makes it possible for every girl to express her personality—by wear- ing a beautiful diamond! As little as 50c, 75¢, or 81 aweek buys that ring at WRC—Thursday, 7:45 WCAO—Tuesdays, 7:30 WCBM—Fridays, 7:45 Styl.i wuh youthful vivacity: by craftsmen old in their art. b diamond in the modern square mounting! A diamond that sparkles with the lights of u-unln—l Mounudmth new