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Forget It! ¥You can hrget holiday ACUTE INDIGESTION if there's Bell- pns in the cabinet now. BELL-ANS (e TOR INDIGESTION “See Etz and See Better” After all is said and done, the fact still remains that the best possible Christmas present is a pair of glasses, ETZ | Optometrists 1217 G St. N.W. MALLARD DUCK || Filleted and Pressed. Served With Wild Rice and Guava Jelly 72w YeAR ! | | Delicious Dinners, $1.25 and $1.50 Pennsylvania Ave. at 11th Street | (so it seemed) | Byrd vrites about the polar | h the walls of Hansen and | Fisher (peaks) on either side, ‘higher | | rock, Don’t delay! Avoid a nasty siege with a cold or sore throat, and their more dangerous complications. Put some Mistol up your nose—or gargle a little —and feel the quick, cool relief as the rawsurfacerelaxesin comfort. Blandly Mistol soothes the soreness away, and before you know it, you're well! Mistol checks infections in the nose and throat where dangerous troubles | often start. Doctors use Mistol. Your | druggist has it. Get a bottle! Made by the Makers of Nu}ol i SPECIAL NOTICES. { TICE OF REDEMPTION. To_the RoMers of prelerred. siock of Chevy Chase Dairy and sll other persons: OTTCE 18 HEREBY 'GI that Chevy chase Datrys Dillncl of Columbia corpora- . will redeem o tios ‘ot one Per “shas i acer gniee “outstanding preferred stock of sald | on. Accnrdlnll n December 1 1030. there will be due o nd payable to every preferred Slockhoider, Upon surtender of his certificate 103 Penayivasts i the sum of One hundred seven Gollers, (310700, togeiner with all accrued dividends thereon to said dlate, for each sbare of preferred stock held by_such stockhold oM and o ‘Becember 1. 1930, dividends said preferred stock will cease to accrue, Sna‘all Tishts with respect thereto shail cease ‘mine. excepting only the rights of 2he folders Thereot 10 Tecelve. said Tedempr Hon price therefor. but without interest. The {ranster books for said preferred stock Fl be closed at the close of busin Yovem ber 25, 1930, and will Tiot thereatier eope: By order of the hoard of directors VY SHASE DAIRY. By BERNARD M. ? Dated October 30. 1930. BCCYC T !“ml'l;’vc.;ib'g BE R:smxslhsu‘;on DEBTB 21 8 oS, Other tha JOHN B. EDELKAMP. Brandywine. Md. 28% WITL NOT BE RESPONSTBLE FOR ANY debts contracted by anybody signing as Art- raft Lighting Pixture Co. but mysell TPSHUR PARKER, 5600 Georsia ‘ave mw. OUR ONE JOB 18 TO MOVE YOUR GOODS with care, consideration and low cost to or from any point within 1.000 miles. 614 H EGINNING MONDAY, DEC. ofice hours of W. W. & om} ghiropodists, 12th and & sis. v owilt e from 8:30 to 7 p.m._continuously: . 2¢ SCRAPED AND FINISHED: FLOOR Feitable garvice Note new ad Qress.| NASH FLOOR CO. 1016 20th st. n.w cmuns PhOR RENT SUITABLE “FOR EBRIDG! STORAGE . C0™ Metropolitan_1844. NG-DISTANCE MOVING — WE_HAVE en keeping faith with the public since 896. Ask about our country-wide service Gail Matio Iluoml 9220." DAVIDSON TRANSFER 08 ot D t ANTED “RETORN ZROM NEW YORK CITY ;gom BosTO! BOSTO! T8 NEW YORK CITY. 18 THIcAGH BEe; DNITED STATES STORAGE CO. IN 418 10th Bt N.W Metropolitan Tois Window Shades 95¢ Genuine 3150 Quality Hartshorn Water- Pproof. Cieanable Curtains on your roliers at our factory: any size up to 36"x8': larger sizes in proportion. Because of public de- mand this sale has been extended two weeks. No telephone orders. The Shade Factory 3417 Conn. Ave. Printing Craftsmen are at your service for result-getting publicity The National Capital Press 12)01212 D St N.W. Phone Nationaj 0650 SR FANTED RETURN 0N City, Vermont. New H N c.). points South ¥ our speciaity Smith’s 1ransfer & Storage! Company. 1313 Yoy St North 3343, Aljed Van Line Service. Overstuffed Furniture Cleaned. Let us give you an estimate. DS NEW RE | phire. Ashevi] ng-distance mov- Builders. Realtors—those who really 00d roof worl Oombw! CAN YOU BEAT Bugy linseed oll “and etalic "roof paint AND GLASS ;_m Wisconsin AreT West" 081, Van Ness Orange Grove. m. | waste born of one | periods of refrigeratic1 that the earth ' Special-—while They Last, Sweet Florida TREE-RIPENED Oranges. 70 for 75c. aagt,have Jusk srrived from Plorids. Come 219 10th St. N.W. Jnsist on Tree-ripened Fnt.!t. IBYRD SAYS POLAR FIELD CHALLENGES Explorer Declares Expedition Simply Tore Bit of Veil. Book Published Today. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, November 28.—Antarc- tica, the South Pole's bleak and barren base, remains unconquered and a l;bll- lenge to man, Rear Admiral Richard Byrd says in “Little America,” the rec- ord of his expedition to the bottom of the world. There remains the last trace of the ice age, out of which emerged life, the admiral says in the volume, which will be published today on the first anni- versary of his flight over the second pole. “'At best,” writes the commander of the band of 80 men, who lived for months on the ice of Little America, “we simply tore away a bit more of the vell which conceals its secrets. In its larger aspects it remains, and probably will remain for many years to come, one of the great undone tasks of the world.” Classes Discovery Important. Discovery of a new land, unseen be- fore, unknown and unclaimed, and its mapping with an aerial camera are be- lieved by Byrd to be among the im- pertant results of his expedition. The pictures will be valuable to glaciologists 50 and 100 years hence, he is convinced, as a permanent record of ice conditions in 1929, against which changes occur- ring in the future may be compared. The technical results of the Byrd ex- pedition are yet to be divulged. 'The scientific staff still is working on four fat_volumes. Byrd's reply to those party lacked hardships “No Antarctic journey, vhether by air or by surface, is easy.” Part of his story, in the form of a diary, shows a busy man literally burn- ing midnight oil in the writing of his Jjournal. Hairbreadth escapes from crevasses and ice packs, from blinding gales, and from crashing on the very ~ Nfiight to the Pole itself against a moun- tain pass are described but simply. The | reward was sight of the Pole in the cen- ur of a limitless plain. Effort to Get There Counts. “That’s about all,” the explorer says. “It is the effort to get there that counts.” “It was an awesome thing, creeping through the narrow pass, flight, than the level of the wings, watching the nose of the ship bob up and down across the face of that lone chunk of . * Once we entered it there would be no retreat. It offered no_room to turn. But most exciting was his discovery of the vast area to whlch he gave the | name “Marie Byrd Land. “For here was the ice age in its chill flooded tide. “Here was a continent throttled and overwhelmed. Here was the lifeless of the greatest has ever known. Seeing it, one could scarcely believe that the Antarctic was {once a warm and fertile climate, with fl{:eown plants and trees of respectable Phonograph Monotonous. “Here, too, in this glacial flood is & counter part of the immense ebb and | flows of ice over the earth which pro- foundly affected mankind. “One could not help but speculate on what new destiny nature has in store for the lowly mammal when the penduluiv. reaches the point of turn.” Of the life in camp he recalls es- pecially the monotony of the phono- graph. “The 'Bells of St. Mary's,” he writes, “is a tune I am not likely to forget.” | WINNERS OF NOBEL PEACE PRIZES INOERWOQD S~ LNBERWOO FRANK B. KELLOGG. DR. NATHAN SODERBLOM. KELLOGG, AWARDED NOBEL PEACE PRIZE, " WILL VISIT NORWAY | e o | (Continued Fror Pirst Page.) IMRS. SARAH L. BROWN DIES AT MOTHER'S HOME Mrs. Sarah Loughborough Brown, 50 years old, wife of W. H. J. Brown, ‘Washington broker, died yesterday at the home of her mother, Mrs. James H. Loughborough, in the Kew Gardens Apartments, 2700 Q street. She had been ill since May. Mrs. Brown, whose family settled here in the Colonial period, resided at 520 River road, her home adjoining the old Loughborough homestead, a 150- year-old landmark in nearby Mary- land. She was a member of the Daugh- ters of the American Revolution. Besides her mother and Mr. Brown, who heads an _investment brokerage firm here, Mrs. Brown is survived by a son, Franc{s C. Brown of San Fran- cisco; two sisters, Misses Caroline and Marguerite Loughborough of Washing- ton, and two brothers, David and Na- than Loughborough. Requiem mass will be solemnized to- morrow morning at 11 o'clock at Holy Trinity Church, Rev. Eugene Kennedy omchun: Interment will be in Oak- | ville Cemetery. CIT; NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Card party, Keane Council, Knights | of Cclumbus, K. of C. Hall, 918 Tenth | | strect, 8 p.m. Card party, Capl!al Bridge Club, Ar- | c lington Hotel, 8 p. Dioner meeting, Washington Retail Credit _Men’s Association, Hamilton Hotel, 5:30 p.m. Meeting, Daughters of Veterans of the Civil War, Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey Tent, J. O. U. A. M. Hall, 808 I street, | Meeung and dance, Southern Soclety of Washington, Willard Hotel, 8 p.m. ored were not disclosed until December 10, the anniversary of the death of Al- fred B. Nobel, Swedish ecientist and donor of the fund for the prizes. The director of the Nobel Institute said that | the traditicn had been broken because the world has a moral right to know the recult as soon as the institute ar- rived at it. Mr. Keilogg was considered before- hand as ceriain winner, his pact being rewarded by the Nobel Institute as one of the noblest human efforts ever given to the world. The statutes for awarding the prize are given in the will of the donor. They 1ead: “Award to him who has done the mest or best to promote brotherhood between natisns and who most effectively has worked for the abolition or reduction of armies and for the creating and stimulating of peace congresses.” A special committee, appointed by Norway's Storting, awarded the prizes. It consists of P:of. Juris Fredrik Stang, president, and members: C. B. Hanns- sen, ship owner: Hars Horst, former high school rector; Halfdan Koth, pro- fessor of history, and Johan Ludwig Mowinckel, premier and foreign secre- tary. | (Copyright. 1830) i | Kellogg's Departure Uncertain. THE HAGUE, Rolland, November 28 | (®)—Frank B. Kellogg, former Amer- ican Secretary cf State, who yesterday iwu awarded the Nobel peace prize for | 1929, said today that he would ga to | | Oslo to receive the award, but the date {of his departure would depend entirely | upon the volume of his work as a judge | | of the World Court. e Robe Stolen From Car. A $25 robe was reported stolen last night from the machine of Ethelbert B. | Prye, 1319 F street, while the car was parked in the 600 block of B street southwest. For Your Girl- Fo r Your Boy- Cycling is their Greatest Joy/ What Health! What Appetites! What Wonderful Exercise! CYCLES “STANDARD OF THE WORLD" for 54 Years This speaks for itself M..mfic nt l-eyeh Coulmclgm -nd qulllpmem, Sparkling, National Broadcasting Co. ' We wili e happy 10 nd you Catelog and Prices \v" STEINFELD,INc. 11-13 E.26 ™ St.NewYork. Dreyfus Film Racks Berlin. “Dreyfus,” a film based by the author, Richard Osswald, on the documentary evidence of the famous case, is proving a success in Berlin, Germany. Osswald Las treated the tragedy of the Jewish captain exhaustively, and the result is a play of nerve-racking power which is sald to cause the- spectator to ask whether it is legend or history which might repeat itself at any time. Lead- ing German actors have roles. THE ROSY GLOW —of comfort that comes from fuel which gives COMPLETE heating satisfaction will be yours if you call Marlow for Famous Reading Anthracite ——consistently excellent superior in performance. Order this dependable hard coal TODAY. You are sure to be pleased. Marlow Coal Co. 811 E St. NW. JUST IMAGINE! Gorgeous Remodeled FUR COATS $2975 ‘RIDAY THREE OF HOUSE UNITE POSITIONS Members Prepare for Session by Rallying Behind Trou- blesome Issues. NOV K By the Associated Press. ‘With the assembling day for Congress | almost here, members today were en-| gaged in consolidating their positions on troublesome issues. ‘Three prominent House members, ac- tive on as many points of conflict, gave out word calculated to gather support for their efforts. ‘The assistant Democratic leader, Rep- resentative McDuffle of Alabama, sought to reconcile dissatisfied members of his party to the co-operative position as- sumed right after election by seven outstanding Democrats. The House-Senate deadlock over pri- vate versus Government operation of Muscle Shoals drew from Representa- tive Reece, Republican, Tennessee, pro- ponent of the first policy, an announce- ment he was preparing a compromise offer. Call Issued by Beck. Representative Beck, Republican, | Pennsylvania, issued a call to members from the industrial States to resist any| efforts to eliminate alien populations| from the census count used in reap- portioniing the House. McDuffie contended there was no si gestion of an “inclination to shirk dut; nor any hint of apology for Democratil victory in the pledge against legislative obstructionism which former presiden- tial candidates and active officers of the party had issued. He reasserted, how- ever, that “in this time of Nation-wide | distress and trying conditions, of course the leadership of the Democratic party is more interested in the national wel- fare than in seeking party advantage.” Reece, chief House conferee on the Muscle Shoals question, said by modifi- cations of the House Bill he hoped to obtain agreement. But, without dis- closing specific changes, he indicated he was maintaining his stand against Gov- ernment, operation, for which the Sen- ate has held out consistently. He maintained dis) osflalll of the g}nnh 'l:; primarily a fertilizer question a should not be used as a symbol in the hydro-electric power controversy. Dry Move Attacked. Beck specifically attacked the move of the Methodist Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals for the elimination of aliens from the reappor- tionment count as an effort to retain dry strength in the representation from agricultural States. “While: the purpose is to sustain the falling edifice of prohibition,” he said, “the movement has a deeper and more portentous significance.” in quality—consistently NAtional 0311 colt has been thoroughly cleaned and relined with 'NEW FUR COATS Beautiful coats in all the popular lining - styles and furs. Just received a Al sizes. A small deposit Your Money large shipment of assorted Coats. Foresight vs. Hindsight HORTY SAYS—“These are the days when an ounce of foresight will save you a pound of trouble and ex your Crankcase, Differential and Transmission have the right Oil and Grease—that your Winter Front, Spark Plugs, Cables and Battery are O. K., that your Radiator and Water Jacket are PROTECTED FOR THE WINTER.” ()IAHS! District 2775 Tirestone mmes axp BATTERIES 3-Piece terhn Silver Setc offee ~Gooq Weigh, Char... Colon,a,' g 38 Yearg 4 A "nl _,II III! l" l;..l ||| d“!mh 4!!. back In 3 days it not satisfied. 1 ve are CAristimay .?!::: M reserves your coat till wanted. nse., Have us make sure CARL INCORPORATED i ” ":::1 WY e uneiy Ask About Sterling Sfiversmiths Guild Plan 935FS MBER 28, Will Rogers 1930. AVALON, Calif—T've many & wad of gum in my and I tell you it makes any gum chewer proud to see how wonderful our money has been spent. This Catalina Island that this fellow Wrigley has stuck together in the ‘ Pacific is an American garden spot. Every gum -chewer should visit it. You swim, golf, fish and chew. It's a tribute to America's only original custom and & monument to a pleased mastication. SUPPLIES FOR NEEDY College Society Leaves Baskets at Doors in Takoma Park. Needy families in Takoma Park opened their doors yesterday morning to find baskets full of clothing, food and good things for the children. ‘The baskets were made up and dis- tributed by the Halcyon Sorority of Washington Missionary College, spon- sored by Miss Minnie E. Abray, dean of | ‘women. IDLE OF 20 CITIES 10 BE SURVEYED Life Insurance Company‘ Data to Be for Unemploy- ment Committee. The number of unemployed persons | |in more than two score cities will be | | ascertained for the President’s Emer- gency Committee on Employment by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. Frederick H. Ecker, president of the company, said today it would be made | as of December 8 and would include | part-time work as well ;as complete unemployment. The citles in the - survey include Akron, Atlanta, Birmingham, Baltimore, | Boston, Bridgeport, BufTalo, Butte, Chi- | cago, Cincmnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Denver, Detroit, Des Moines, Fall River, Grand Rapids, Indianapolis, Jackson. ville, Kansas City, Mo.; Los Angeles, Louisville, Manchester, N. H.; Memphis, Milwaukee, New Orleans, New York, Oakland, Calif; Oklahoma City, Omaha, Philadelphia, Plttsburgh, Port- land, Me.; Portland, Ore.; Providence, | Richmond, Rochester, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, _Seattle, | ‘Toledo, Wichita, Wilkes-Barre, Wllmlng-‘ ton and Winston-Salem. MILK FROM THE WORLD'S MODEL DAIRY Drink for Milk Health MORNING - - - NOON and night! Even the pleasures and recreations of these busy days burn up an amazing amount of physical and mental enc-gy . . . exhaust vitality . . . reduce precious health vitamins. Then you need MILK ...plenty of milk...morning, noon and night! It’s Nature’s perfect health food. But be sure you get the full benefits of Superior Quelity milk... extra rich, extra safe. our driver. PHONE POTOMAC 4000 Phone, write or stop STORE FOR RENT —downtown, 1}; blocks from F St, el to new office k=ilding or Electric 'Power Co., Gas Light Co., a w Government Office Buildings; 4,000 sq. ft., with mezzanine, fireproof; $300 mo. MEtro. 1844 | WEST END LAUNDRY 2 * Phone Metropolitan 0200 mm - $15,950 6505 Conn. Avenue Chevy Chase New Stone, Brick-and Stucco Home. 4 BED- ROOMS, 2 BATHS, 2- CAR BUILT-IN GARAGE. Deep lot, trees. Open, lighted till 9 p.m. Edw. H. Jones & Co., Ine. 5520 Conn. Ave. Cleve. 2300 Selected s the World's Model Dairy Plant and rated 100% by the District of Columbie Noe Health Department. FOR SERVICE Connected With Any Other Dairy Institution WASHINGTON INDUSTRY For 40 Years DECAT 140 URr o