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1 A SOUNTY RED CRUSS EADYFOR DRV Prince William Prepared for 100 Per Cent Solicitation, { Beginning Tomorrow. *ehl Dispatch to The Star. MANASSAS, Va., November 10.—The | | coupled with the great stars. ice Willlam County Chapter, Amer- Red Cross, tomorrow, Armistice , will launclt the annual roll call lve, with all of the magisterial dis- ts and most of the townships so ized as will make a 100 per cent ieitation possible. “There is no doubt that the coun- t¥ is fully awake to the responsi- ties which may devolve upon our pter this Winter,” said Mrs. W, L. d, president of Prince William apter, this morning, “and we in turn anxious to bé ready to meet the upon it.” Drought Adds to Problems. Pointing to the fact that the longest and most severe drought on record has affected every tion of the county, Mrs. Lioyd @red that the Winter holds potentia'#y great relief problems, with many of thim already here. Headed by Mrs. Mamie Lynch Du- laney, chairman the Roll Call Com- mittee, the following committee chair- men will swing into action on Armistice day and with a band of assistants will strive to bring about a 100 per cent enroliment: Manassas—Mrs.-A. A. Hooff, Manassas High School; the Swavely School, Mrs, R. 8. Illingworth; Bennett School, Mrs. Howard Jamisori; Mrs. Stuart Pattie, Mrs. Margaret Lewis, Mrs. J. P. Lyon, Mrs. Stewart McBryde, Mrs. R. Bruce Hynson, Mrs. Guy Allen, Mrs. C. Wade Dalton, Miss Sennie Cockerel. Colored schools and residents, Adeline Penn, chairman, v Bpecial Cdmmittee—Drs. E. H. Mar- steller, Stewart McBryde and J. A. Delaney; Messrs. C. C. Lynn, L. Lloyd, E. K. Conner, O. D. Wa 3 Raymond Ratcliffe, C. R. C. Johnson, Robert A.-Hutchison, Thomas H. Lion, ‘Wheatley Johnson, Fred W. Dowell and G. Berger Cocke. Checkers, Maj. F. W. Pattersorr and Drs. L. F. Hough and | Y V. V. Gilum. . Nokesville District, Nokesville, J. A. Hooker; Quantico, Mrs. M. Lieberman; Stone House, Mrs. C. F. l%u'lll: ‘Woodlawn, Mrs. W. L. Liloyd; Woodbridge, Mrs. Egbert Thomp- son: Occhbquan, Mrs. John Cline; Hick- ory Grove, Mrs. Lena Taylor Wilson; Min- nieville, Mrs. E. J. Clark; Independent /HAll, Mrs. R. L, Linton; Gold Ridge, W. Y. Ellicott; Cherry Hill, H. O. Russell; Aden, Mrs. Benjamin Brown; Buckhall, Mrs. A. Lund: Bristow, Mrs. E. Dickens; Catharpin, Mrs. Will §. Brower; Can- non Branch, Mrs. Chloe E. Hodge and " Miss E. Thomason; Dumfries, Mrs. Jane Abel; Greenwich, Mrs. Raymond Ellis; &ymlfllet. Mré_John Piercy and Mrs. | rvel ‘Turns Right Out! DESERT PLANTS VARY | 1 Hall; Hoavlley, Mrs. E. A. Smith. —ad One Class Blooms \After Summer Rains, Other After Winter. TUCSON, Ariz. (#).—In the two rainy seasons in the desert, says »r. Forrest Shreve, head of the desert Jaboratory of the Carnegie Institution, tiwo entire- 1y distinct classes of thort-lived plants | g up. 3 One grows after the Winter rains, the other after the Summer rains.\ Their ¥ seceds lie dormant through whicl; ever - & - rainy season i$ not of the tempetature y #M%M&N%N%%&%fifi Great News!? . For Children of All Ages and for Grown-Ups, too! li% G STREET AT ELEVENTH Comedian Fulfills Life Ambition; Joins Stars After Death Dream of 27 Years Re- vealed in Obituary Writ- ten by Own Hand. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, November 10.—For 27 years Tommy West, a comedian, had dreamed of some day seeing his name Before he turned on' the gas and took his life in the kitchen of his home yesterday he wrote his own “notice” for a theatrical magazine. After carefully listihg the parts he had portrayed and the circuits he had plaved. he wrote: “And if anybody wants to know where I am, just tell them that at last I'm with the big-timers — Bert Williams, Jack Donahue, Caruso and the rest of the crowd.” | West was 45 and unmarried. He had played in burlesque and vaudeville for 27 years. . CARDS FOR DIVORCEES Stereotyped Formula to Friends Seen in Paris. PARIS (N.AN.A)—A list headed | “‘divorces” may soon be appearing with the births, deaths and marriage an- nouncements in the Paris newspapers, for it has already become proper for people to inform their friends when they are divorced. The stereotyped | formula, served up after the fashion of the wedding or invitation card. has Inform not yet appeared, but doubtless it is not far off: ‘Tha utility of these measures, says the Parisian, is obvious. The awkward situations arising from solicitous in- quiries after the health of one’s wife of yesterday or husband of last week are increasing. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paper Alliance.) : L Ingrown Nail Pain Stops Instantly! “Outgro” is a harmless antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. How- | ever, anyone can buy from the drug | store a tiny bottle containing direc- tions. \ A few drops of “Outgro’ | in the | erevice of the ingrowing nail reduces | inflammation and pain and so tough- | ens the tender, s ive skin under- neath the toe nail, that it nnot THE EVENING CAREFUL PREPARATIONS FOR DEATH DEFEAT TRY Viennese Carpenter Blunts Two Bullets for Suicide and They Lodge Barely Under Skin. VIENNA (N.AN.A).—Anton Kaider, death when he attempted suicide, so be blunted the points of two bullets, dum-dum fashion, and achieved ex- actly the opposite effect. Both of the bullets lodged so close to the skin that a doctor was able to pull them out with little difficulty and Kaider has nothing to show for his pains but a few scratches. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- per Alliance.) oy DR-IVE ON PIGEth Birds Held Sacred in Turkey Must Leave Bayazid Mosque. STAMBUL, November 5 (N.AN.A.) — London is not the only city that has had to resort to getting rid of some of its pigeons. The old woman who sells grain on the courtyard of the Bayazid Mosque here has been warned that she must find other means of employment. Pigeons love the court of a mosque and in Turkey they have hitherto been held sacred. Here they have been fed and protected as religiously as they are today in Venice. The municipality has been heavily petitioned by a pigeon- loving population and their drastic ac- tion in the cause of hygiene may in consequence be deferred at least. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paper Alliance.) LONDON SHOW A ITA u.s. One of Original Covered Wagons to Be a Feature. LONDON (#)—There will be a dis- tinet American angle to this year's Lord Mayor’s Show on November 11. One of the original covered wagons used in 1829-30 by British pioneers who took part in the opening of the great Northwest will be a feature. The wagon will be drawn by six horses and accompanied by full-blooded Indians in native dress, led by Chief White Elk. You're not sick, yet mot well | Your stomach isn't just right, you don't sleep well and you tire easily. Your color isn't what it should be and ycu probably look drawn. | A sort of vague, run-down feel- | ing is one of the first symptoms of acidity, Acidity is due to our un-| ! natural eating, our irregular hours | and other excesses. The excess acid upsets digestion and causes putrefas | tion and fermentation In the gastre | Intestinal canal. This frequently r | sults m sick headaches, dizzy spells, “nerves,” mental depression and ge: eral lassitude. | A remarkable new corrective of | acidity has been developed by a fa- mous 100-year-old pharmaceutical | house in Germany. | This new, improved magnesia comes i the fom of small, white tablets, ca'led Magnesia Oxolds, which do not have to be chewed, but may be swal- | lowed whole. Magnesia Oxoids, upon contact with the acid in the stomach, generate nascent, or active oxygen. | Now, active oxygen, as any doctor will penetrate the fiesh, ahd the nail turns | naturally out most overnight a carpenter, wanted to make sure of | A STAR, WASHIN LAUGH CULT DISBANDS | Budapest Police Fail to See Heal- ing Power and Order Ban. BUDAPEST, November 5 (N.AN.A.). —No sooner, it seemed, had news reached here of the new religious sect of Debrecsin than it melted away again. promising sect it was, too. Its cult was laughter, in capital letters, and its members were encouraged to roar with mirth and exhorted to burst into peals | of merriment at the services for which they met together. But the police failed entirely to see the tonic value and the healing power of this laughter. A few united roars and they have disbanded the sect for | “irreverence and general lack of se- | riousness.” (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paper Alliance.) Will Cure That NERVOUS HEADACHE COLD and NEURALGIA Get a package at your druggist today Trial Size, 104 Large Size, 25¢ “I Don't Feel ~ Just Right, Doc’ (The Common Way of Describing Acidity) | required for acidity. the secretion of the It checks the putrefaction and fei mentation in the tro-intestinal canal. It stimulates the activities of the intestinal walls and alds the natural movement of the bowels. | All three effects are necessary to| the t:ue relief of acidity and Mag- | nesia Oxoids supply them in a per-| | fectly natural manner. | Make This Acidity Test | | See for yourself how much acid || has to do with your run-down con- dition and that persistent feeling of tiredness. Make this acidity test. | Get a_package of Magnesia Oxolds from Peoples Drug Stores, Inc., or| any other druggist today on our money-back guarantee. Take two after each meal. Note the pick-up in | your pep and vigor. Mark the new peace of your stomach and nerves. | If, after taking contents of one bot- tle, you don’t notice a decided im- provement in your health, return the tell u, when generated within the | digestive tract does just the things bottle to the druggist and he will re- | fund your money.—Advertisement. | e 3 But!—It’s a secret until next Wednesday-—when it will be announced over W.R.C. at 5:45 and in The Washington Star and Times / Watch for it—and Listen in! PALAIS ROYAL TELEPHONE DISTRICT 4400 NAtional 5220 Charge Accounts Invited BOTH SIDES OF 7™AT K FreeParking |’ Space Opposite 8th Street Entrance Popular Group for Women and Misses Tomorrow! $20 and $22.50 COATS Girls’ $7.98 Chinchilla Coats \ $5.98 Genuine “Trucurl” qual- ity; smartly tailored with large storm collars and deep, roomy pockets; plaid flannel lining. Navy, red, green and tan. Sizes 7 to 14 years. Tots" and Little Girls’ Chinchilla Coats wie $4.98 Regular $6.50 Value Warm coats that will efford comfort for little girls. Well made and warmly lined. Sizes 1 to 6 years. Choice of navy, red, tan and copen. Goldenbery's—Third Floor 79c Regular and Extra Sizes. Heavy, warm, fleecy lannelette Nightgowns. in neat stripes. Made with yoke back and front. Women’s 88¢ Costume Slips Rayon Flat Crepe Costume Slips, in pink, peach, 69 (&4 nile and white. Well tailored and perfect fitting. $4.00 Rayon Bedspreads Goldenbers's—Second Floor Size 80x105, with scal- i loped edges; in blue, gold, orchid and green shades. Lustrous quality. Full double-bed size. $1.25 Seamless Double Bed Sheets 81x99 Bleached Sheets—extra size for double beds. Made of fine quality sheeting, free from starch. 94C Goldenberg’s—Main Floor $1.00 Griswold Fry Pans 69c Cast iron fry pans with polished smooth inside fin- ish. No. 8 size. Very ; handy. $1.59 16-Piece Luncheon Set 16 pieces—4 each of cups, saucers, oatmeal $l.00 dishes, plates. Some pieces imperfect. Goldenberg's—Down; $2.19 Curtain Stretchers $1 .88, Large, strong curtain stretchers of clear wood. Have rustless pins. Will tretch any size curtain. Ash Cans corrugated 98C Goldenberg’s—Downstairs Store $1.39 20-Gal. 20-gallon capacity ash cans of strong galvanized iron. 59¢ Window Shades 32c Good grade opaque shades, ‘mounted on de- pendable rollers. Eecru or green. Slight seconds. Window Shades 89c 59¢ Lustrous Rayon Satin 33c yd. 40 inches wide; all rayon quality, in white, pink, orchid, copgn, old rose, tan, maize, nile green and navy blue. $1.65 Sunfast Genuine sunfast quality shades, 3x6-ft. size, in blue, white or ecru. Seconds. Goldenberg’s—Fourth Floor Regular 25¢ Yd. Wide Percales Superior quality high-count percales, 36 inches wide, in a varied assortment of new and pretty printings; all fast colors. 1 8c Goldenberg's—Main Floor.—Charge Accounts Invited, Clever ¢opies of high- priced sport and dress coats, generously trimmed with moufflon, red fox, manchurian wolf (Chinese dog) or beayerette (coney). Of special interest are black Russian coats with huge collars, cuffs, borders. and berets of astrakhan; whole coats of astrakhan; and fur fabric jackets with smart tweed coat and beret (these in 14 to 20 only). Sizes 14 to 42. Goldenberg's—Second “Floor All-wool and part-wool fancy Sport Sweaters, in pull-over styles. Sizes 26 . to 36. Perfect and slight irregulars. Boys’ $1.50 Golf Knickers—Pair A ial b f 300 pairs boys' full- lived knickerh, carefully tailored from suiting $1 .19 mixtures, Sizes 8 to 18 years. Goldenberg's—Boys' Depariment, Third Floor Women’s Smart Handbags » i ) —— Du Pont fabrics and moires — look just like higher priced bags. Zip-] pers and popular shapes in many color effects. 50c Pearl and Crystal* Necklaces Assortment of pretty styles and combinations with 29 sparkling crystal-like beads. *Simulated. C Goldenberg’s—Main Floor Women’s 59¢ Rayon Undies ‘Well tailored rayon un- dies in panties and step- ins; neatly lace trimmed; pastel shades. Women's sizes. Children’s 89¢ Waist Suits Hudson Mills rayon striped waist suits, short 69c sleeves; knee length. Sizes 2 to 12. Goldenberg's—Main Floor $1.65 Grenadine Full fashioned. Silk from top to toe, clear even weave. The | hose that remains dull even after f P=—— washing. Slight irregulars. - Girls’ 50c Triple A Hose Plain with novelty contrasting cuff or all-over effects. Samples of this famous brand. Goldenbers's—Main Floor 29C $10 100% Wool Blankets Soft, fluffy blankets, with plenty of warmth in them. All in pretty plaids. Double-bed size, 60x80 inches. $1.00 Bed Pillows, Each Well filled, covered with durable striped ticking. Goldenberg's—Fourth Floor 69c Congoleum Coverings 39c Smartly colored high- grade congoleum floor covering. All new and cut from full rolls, Sec- onds.