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T § H H ¢ i § . ¥ & v ; ¥ H 2 I3 { i i i 1 i i { H i ¥ i i s A S e s Hygl Towels and Toilet Tissues Prevent Contaglous Diseases Spread- in Factories and Homes ASPARAGUS Delicious when served cold on lettuce with a French dressing secsoned with LEA & PERRINS SAUCE Subscribe Today It costs only about 1%, cents per da$ and 5 cents Sundays to have Washington’s best newspa- per delivered to you regularly every evening and Sunday morn- ing. ‘Telephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- lect at the end of each month. R ; ENDURING FATIGUE IN MID-AFTERNOON IS NOT ADVISABLE | Fagged System Invites Sick- ness, Inefficiency—Renew | Vigor by Eating a Sweet Medical investigations show that dally fatigue not only makes the system susceptible to illness and organic troubles, but also lessens one's efficlency. Tired people, espe- clally those engaged in offices and stores, have difficulty in concen- trating or “keeping awake” on '.hel Job. | Most business” people find that four o'clock is their zero hour as far as vitality is concerned. To re- | new vigor at this time, many men | and women take a moment to eat or | | drink something sweet. The results |are surprising—almost instantly fa- tigue is overcome. Medical men and food scientistis who have experimented along these | lines say that the renewed vigor is| caused by the refined sugar in the| food of beverages. Sugar nourishes | the body very fuickly and when this | occurs fatigue disappears. Americans, it 1s said, are more subject to business fatigue than any other nationality. However, Ameri- can, Workers can quickly get candy, ice . cream, cakes and bevel‘llu“ evérywhere. ‘A glass of water sweet- ened with' sugar—the “athlete’s cock- | tall"—is reviving. Most foods are more delicious ‘and nourishing with | The fact that mothers use recommend Gro Laxative BRO QUININE Tabl for colds and head- achesthan anyother | cold remedy is an outstanding proof of its merit. sl Grove’s Laxatide QUININE Tablets COVERRNENT 05T SEEN AT HGH PEAK Business Parley at Cleveland Told States’ Debts Mount to $1,247,000,000. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, November 11.—The constantly mounting cost of government |and the causes behind it were scruii- n at the National Conference on Government today. As an example of the increase in goverrment expenditures, C. E. Rightor | 0f Detroit told the gathering of 500 mayors, city managers and municipal leaders that the total indebtedness of all the States had increased 725 per cent in & quartef of a century. In 1905 the States’ indebtedness was $150,000,000, of $1.74 per capita, he sald, whereas in 1925 it was $1,247,000,~ 000, or $10.20 per capita. Easy to Add Expenses, This increase was blamed in part by Robert N, Goodrich, executive secretary of the Taxpayers' Lezgue of Duluth, to the “feeling that it comes easier to add xpenses than to pare budgets. In the granting of new services or additional salaries, officials find that they incur no enmity except the very abstract and remote disapproval of the impersonal taxpayers, whereas should they turn down the request of the in- dividual, they are almost sure to meet criticism and perhaps hostility. This more than anything else, I believe, has contributed to the cost of government.” Other Causes Assigned. Choosing of political supporters for appointive offices, public salary sched- ules, the present set-up of financial | procedures and lack of political philos- ophy were other causes advanced b; Goodrich, 7 Automobile competition and traffic congestion have given street car com- g::lu 'gur nu:‘t.;o)flous xu-vtfl:mt l': tory, James M. Weish, assistan the president of the Cleveland Rallway Co., reported. Whereas formerly the creating faster and quieter trolleys to compete with the au- tomobile and to training employes in “sefety, courtesy and salesmanship.” DOHENY OIL LEASES HELD FREE OF FRAUD Action of Court Permits Explora- tion of One of Greatest Poten- tial Fields in California. By the Assoclated Press. LOS ANGELES, November 11.—The leases negotiated by Edward L. Doheny, oil magnate, for the Pan-American Western Petroleum Co. to 660 acres of ofl lands in the Elk Hills Naval Reserve No. 1 were held valid and free of fraud in a decision today by Federal Judge Frank H. Norcross of Nevada. The judgment was the outcome of the civil suit instituted by the Federal Gov- ernment against the company on grounds of alleged fraud last Winter, By the decision the leases, now con- led by the Richfield Ofl Co. of Cali- fornia through purchases of the Doherty interests, remain undisturbed, and give Richfield the right to exploration of one of the greatest potential oil flelds in Calffornia. The lands involved are val- ued at $29,000,000, and are located in Kern County. A second important phase of the Judgment was the release of a reserve ;u;: of $5,000,000 established by Rich- Go its allegations the Gover: tlzlllmtdf !rAud‘h:"deelxhud in the grant- Ing of some of eases to Doh by ?,llbertufl B. Fndll, former Secretary '«:}ymi | or, and an old friend of | wealthy ofl man, . FILES DENIAL OF CHARGES Edwina Booth, Screen Actress, An- swers $50,000 Alienation Suit. LOS ANGELES, November 11 (#).— Edwina Booth, screen actress, filed an answer in Superior Court yesterday denying all charges in a $50,000 aliena- tion of effections suit brought against her by Mrs. Suzette Renaldo, wife of Duncan Renaldo, an actor, Mrs. Renaldo alleged Miss Booth alienated Renaldo’s affections while they were with a film company in Africa and influenced him to file suit for divorce. ed Miss Booth influenced her d, Anthony G. Snuck, to obtain an annulment on the ground she was under legal age. TR Pure “Food” : . . is an essential for the satis- factory operation of an auto- matic anthracite stoker. In the King yards every precau- tion is taken to see that anthracite in the Buckwheat and Rice sizes reaches you sparklingly clean and dry. Special storage bins and spe- cial methods of handling these stoker sizes are just a part of the comprehensive King service — service that has stood the test of 95 years o f Washington patronage. This service is yours for the asking. Call us TO- DAY. WILLIAM KING & SON ESTABLISHED 1835 COAL MERCHANTS Main Office 1151 16th Street Georgetown 12901 K Street ) waud 11, 1930, [Teacher Who Saved | Xz =i s i o 8 o st o ey oo swet Foatows T i Vitaming 2,500 Pupils in‘Fire Dies in Gas Flames New York’s Oldest Public School Instructor Trap- ped in Kitchen Blaze. By the Assoctated Press. NEW YORK, November 11.—Miss Sarah Bleakley, the oldest school teacher in the city, once marshaled 2,500 puplls from flames to safety, but she couldn't save her own life In a gas stove blaze. ‘While she was cooking in her upper East Side apartment, her clothes caught fire last night and she collapsed from burns and smoke. She died in a hos- ital. s ‘Three of her pets perished with her. A Pomeranian dog died of suffocation and two cats were trapped in the blaz- ing kitchen. A second pomeranian and another cat were in the front of the house and were saved. Miss Bleakley, who was 70 and had been a teacher for 49 years, was given a medal by & newspaper for her heroism in a fire in 1908. Smelling smoke while in class, she quietly wrote a note to the principal and the school fire drill was sounded, sending the 2,500 boys and girls to the street without a trace of panic. TEAGUE WILL CONTINUE WITH U. S. FARM BOARD Postponement of Resignation Until July 15, 1981, Is Reported by California Paper. By the Associated Press. FRESNO, Calif., November 11.—The Republican said today the resignation of C. C. Teague, California member of the Federal Farm Board, scheduled for December 15, has been postponed until July 16, 1931, and Mr, Teague has written a letter to President Hoover to that effect. Teague, father of the California grape-control program, accepted Presi- dent Hoover’s appointment to the Fed- Farm Board July 15, 1929, intend- to serve for one year, At the end of the period the grape program was still in the formative ;cmmd and Mr. Teague remained on the ard. CASH PRIZES OFFERED High School Contest Is Announced for Study of Negro. ATLANTA, Ga. November 11 (#).— The Commission on Interracial Co- operation announced yesterday that a cash prize of $100 will be awarded the Southern high school pupil submitting Sweet potatoes contain as much les, more An additional prise of $100, the an- lmuum:em-nnmh"vmbnnvmh;lme school ‘making e best use of Announ prizes commission’s t for study of |is to encourage the Study of the Negro's | much vitamin C as orange juice or “America’s m’&"‘finr 'l'h.u title of ' part in American history. peach an le juice. At The First Sign of a Cough Thousands Turn to T heir Bottle of Hall’s Expectorant for Prompt, Safe Relief A seemingly trivial cough is very often the forerunner of more serious illness if it isn’t promptly checked. Nature’s warning means it is time for action. Disagreeable coughs from colds sap your energy, lower your vitality and make you an easy victim of “fin” and pneu- monia. Thousands of deaths each year could be prevented if folks would only realize the im- ortance of checking a cold at its beginning. At the first sign of a cough begin taking Hall’s Expectorant. It promptly quiets the cough, soothes and heals the irritated membranes of the bronchial tract and checks the growth of cold germs. This time-tried remedy has been the family stand-by in thousands of homes for more than a quarter of a century, You, too, will find Hall's Expec- torant an excellent preparation for promptly and safely ending stubborn, disagreeable coughs due to colds. At the First Siy of a COUGIIT‘ TlallsexpecTorANT Promptly and Safely Stops COUGAS due to QOLDS Small Size, 35c—Large Size,: 60c—Family Size, $1 IFETIM] FURNITURE At All Drug Stores REDUCTIONS on Lifetime Furniture this week tell you to BUY NOW Lifetime Furniture is priced lower now than it has been for years. We earnestly recommend that you an- ticipate every possible furniture need and purchase before condi- tions again foree prices upward. SUITES and single pieces - in much variety AT SAVINGS Se;ect Lifetime Seventh Street . THE NEW LOW PRICE of GULISTAN RUGS Is 312.5 for 9x12 Size A remarkably low price for this American- made Oriental type rug. Deep, lustrous pile and patterns reproduced from old Persian carpets. - 8.3x10.6 size—$119 6x9 size Gulistan Rug. . $82.50 o s, $45.50 Gotisan Rog.. $21.50 et . $13.50 o $8.50 Cotinan Rug.... $9.75 Axminster Rugs, size 9x12 $35, $36.75, $39.50, $44, $59.50 = ® Other Sizes in Proportion Furniture Now at Savings MAYER & CO. BetMn D and E WASHINGTON'S FINEST MEN'S WEAR RALEIGH HABERDASHER | 1310 F Street NEW DOUBLE-LOOP Worsted Curl OVERCOATS ~ $50 Equal value last Winter $60 . Hart Scl.-naffner & Marx tailored these coats. We know of no overcoat, re- gardless of price, that will give more satisfaction than these luxurious dou- ble loop Worsted Curls. Handsome dark blues and Briar browns in the new 1931 single and double breasted styles. We have sald hundreds of these Worsted Curl coats in past sea- sons at $60 and have never had a coat returned for unsatisfactory wear. We unconditionally guarantee the wear of every coat. YOU'LL “BUY NOW™ AFTER SEEING THESE NEW 1931 Hart Schaffner & Marx Worsted SUITS s45 Equal value last Winter $55 Men and Young men in Universities and business will be surprised at the fine quality of our new worsteds, Single and double-breasted styles and ‘colors; with extra trousers for extra wear. = HABERDASHER 310 F Street