Evening Star Newspaper, December 14, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

~ HALFBILLIONINTAX 1S DUETHIS WEEK Nearly $2,000,000,000 to Pass Through Treasury in Three Days. By the Associated Press. Nearly two billion dollars will travel the financial roads through the Treasury this week and when the dust has settled $359,000,000 of the amount will locked in Government coffers. In three days the various payments | into the Treasury will total $1,031,000,- 000, while expenditures will amount to $672,000,000. ‘The immense business of those days, | December 15, 16 and 17, is due to the December financing, collection of the | third quarter’s payment of income taxes, payment of maturing obligations, re- ceipt of war debt payments from for- eign governments and payment of inter- est on the public debt. Government_experts hope the final income tax payments on 1929 incomes, which were reduced 1 per cent, will total $580,000,000. Collections Drop Off. ‘This would bring the total collection of this sort of revenue for the fiscal year to approximately $1,217,000,000, and for the calendar year on 1929 in- comes to approximately $2,105,000,000. The collections for the fiscal year to date have dropped off $61,000,000, as compared with the same period last year, to a total of $657.000.000. Money coming into the Treasury in addition to that from income taxes will be $428,000,000 from the sale of two issues of Treasury certificates of in- debtedness and $123,000,000 from foreign nations in payment on the principal and interest on their war debts. Of the war debt payments, $31,000,000 is on principal and must be devoted to re- duction of the public debt, while $92,000,000 of interest can be used for general expenditures. On_the outgoing side of the ledger the Government has to meet $480,000,- 000 of certicates of indebtedness $90.000,000 interest on the public debt and $102,000,000 in maturing Treasury bills. The balance left from the fiscal operations is expected to furnish funds for operation of the Government until next March, when the first payment of income tax on 1930 incomes will be Teceived. Certificates Interest Experts. To the financial experts, the most interesting part of the week’s operations was afforded through the sale of the $428.000.000 of certificates of indebted- ness, which were offered at the lowest rates such securities have ever borne. A six-month issue for $159,000,000, bearing 134 per cent interest, was over- subscribed about six times, while the 12-month issue for $268,000,000, bear- ing 17% per cent interest, was over- subscribed twice. The response to the offering was pointed to as indicating that investors favor the shorter term investments in hope that improvements in business conditions would bring a higher rate of interest in less than a year. 100 GIRLS GET JOBS Telephone C;mny Enlarges Force During Holidays. The Chesapeake & Potomac Tele- hone Co., in preparation for the usual ncrease in calls during the Christmas #eason, will employ more than 100 additional telephone operators, begin- l&lndg Monday, it was announced yes- rday. About 25 per cent of this number Wwill be retained, permanently, accord- to_an announcement made by Hanse Hamilton, general manager. SPECIAL NOTIC NATIONAL METROPOLITAN BANK OF D. C.. December 12th, 1930.— 1) of the shareholders of this nk for the election of directors and the transaction of such other business ag may properly come before the meeting will held at the banking house on Tuesday, January 13th, 1931, at 12 m. 'olls to remain 2penguptl ¥ opm, Tianster Sooks will be i om January 4th. 1931, to January 13th. 1931, both dates inciuded ____C. F. JACOBSEN, Cashier. _ ¥HIS 18 TO GIVE NOTICE THAT. A8 PRO- Yided by the by-laws, & meeting for the n said company, my name this the 1930, 'SMITH, Becretary. _ SUITABLE _FOR quets, weddings and up Der day each; new chairs. ES STORAGE CO.. 418 10th Metropolitan_1844. 2% ANT TO HAUL FULL OR PART_LOAD to or from New 'York. Richmond., Boston, Pittaburgh and all way points: special rates ATIONAL DELIVERY ASSN., INC.. 1317 Y. ave. Nat. 1460. Local movin CAN YOU BEAT THIS? re linseed oil and metallic roof paint 50 per Fation BESKER PAINT AND GLASS €O Wisc n_Ave. West. 7. w. & 3 - 12th and G sts. nw. will m t0 7 p.m. continuously. H NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR debts contracted by any one else but my- seif. SAMUEL A. PORLINO, 151 1ith se. * — CLEARANCE SALE BI reconditioned st bargain Columbia Racer, with brake: Admiral Service Bike, Rambier. Pope. several 26-inch bicy- cles:’ one Fairy and one American sidewalk bike. Rensonably priced. 2461 18th st.. Nat. 8port Bhop._Open_evenings. LOORS SCRAPED AND FINISHED; FLOORS machine or hand _ work. NASH FLOOR CO.. 1016 20th st. West 1071, ALLIED VAN LINE SERVICE. Nation-Wide Long-Distance Moving. WANTED- LOADS URN om New York Cf R rices: 08 Tomn Bt oNWS i Men'’s Suits Cleaned, 50c ‘ Plain Dresses, 2 for $1 By our special individusl cleansing process. These are cash and carry prices *» ~ 2125 18th 8Bt. N.W. O’BOYLES %3 0500 % Hollywood Orchard Out Georgia ave. 2 miles past D. C. line. licious cider, 40c gallon. Bring container. Boes i New Vs Y Overstufied Furniture Cleaned. Let us sive you an estimate A. C. Thour Cleaning Co., Inc., 728-38 1ith Bt NE. n 12 Wmn LOAD:! v South. Long-dis ice moving our Sith’s Transfer & Storage Company. 139 North 334 TORled Van Line Service a Window Shades 95¢ Genuine $150 Quality Hartshorn Water- roor e S1e Sulfz, Sarihorn Wster; ir factory: any size up to 36”x! iarger roportion. No phone ore de e Sha actory _ 3417 _Conn. A, Furniture Repairing, Upholstering, Chair Caneing CLAY ARMSTRONG 1235 10th St. N.W., Metropolitan 2062 e ich insures low § YORK &), be| severed athletic relations. stadium. Upper: Cadets of the United States Military Academy parading in the Yankee Stadium, New York, just before the start of the Army and Navy foot ball game. Center: Midshipmen of the United States Naval Academy in drill formation prior to taking their seats in the Lower: The Army mule and the ley goat meet for the first time in three years. —P. & A. Photo. —Wide World Photo. —Wide World Photo. By the Assoclated Press. YANKEE STADIUM, New York, De- cember 13.—The greatest show foot ball ihas to offer was piled into the Yankee Stadium this afternoon for the relief of the needy. And it earned upward |of $600,000. The Army beat the Navy |8 to 0 before 70,000 spectators who paid $5 to $50 a seat for the aid of the - | Salvation Army relief fund. It was the highest price scale in the annals of the game, and the gate re- ceipts of three-fifths of a million dol- | 1ars nudged the record set by the same two teams four vears ago when they met in larger Soldiers’ Field in Chicago. newal of the classic clash between the | Nation’s military and naval academies truly gave twice. gave a hand- some sum for the benefit of the un- employed, which will be augmented by thousands of dollars when donations totaled, and they gave themselves a rich thrill of sport and spectacle. They pulsed in quick-step time to { the martial melodies and tread of close {upon 3,000 cadets and midshipmen who paraded into the stadium just after noon and kept it alive and ringing un- til dusk with songs and yells and marching and assorted antics. Army and Navy Heads Present. They craned their necks to see dozens | state craft and social 'among them Secretary of War Patrick 1J. Hurley and Secrefary of the Navy Charles Francis Adams, who came from Washington with parties of friends and colleagues to witness the event. Another honored guest was Evangeline Booth, commander of the Salvation Army, seeing her first foot ball game. She expressed her gratitude to those who enabled the game to be played for the benefit of the Salvation Army, | promised that the spending of the fund would be regarded “as a privilege only | equaled by its great responsibility,” and asked a blessing upon “every hand and heart that has contributed to this unprecedented charity.” The student corps from West Point and Annapolis, one in its brass-buttoned gray and the other'in dark blue crowned by caps of white, outdid themselves to amuse and amaze the 70,000. The show they put on was climaxed between the halves when the midshipmen got out colored cards and made the great bleacher rectangle where they sat a suc- cession of gay designa, - ' ‘The multitude which braved a bright | » | but bitter December day to see the re- from radio listeners and others are | |of notable figures out of the pages of | register—chiet | SERVICE GAME NETS $600,000 FOR RELIEF OF UNEMPLOYED 70.000 Spectators Pay $5 to $50 a Seat to See Army Defeat Navy 6 to 0. High Officials Present. First they made letters with the | colored cards spell “Hello, New York.” | Then the kaleldescopic ' oblong said | “Ahoy,” picturing a lighthouse beside a | | sea of blue and under a sky of crimson. ‘They shifted their cards to make a shield of red, white and blue, then sang | “Anchors Aweigh"” as the ocean of cards | became a Navy anchor on a fleld of white. The placards became an Army | mule, which was made to kick and was | followed on to the scene by a Navy goat, | which magically butted the mule out of | the picture. Finally the cards became | an American flag which waved as the | midshipmen swung from side to side in | even rhythm. Between the halves Secretary Hurley | crossed the flield and escorted back to a microphone Secretary Adams. Both were presented to the air audience by | Mayor Walker of New York, and during the last and exciting half of the game | Secretary Adams was the guest of Sec- | retary Hurley in the latter's box on the Army side of the field. ‘The kick-off sent end over end down |the fleld a foot ball autographed by President Hoover, the Secretaries of War and Navy, Mayor Walker and the players on the two teams. This pigskin was withdrawn from competition at once, and was to have been auctioned |to the highest bidder between halves. Whalen Gets Foot Ball. But when $5,000 had been raised in by Bud Fisher, cartoonist—the sale was called off and Comdr. Booth asked that ball be given to Grover C. Whalen, for- mer New York police commissioner and chairman of the Citizens' Com- mittee which arranged the game. Mr. Whalen got the foot ball, but the bid- ders gave their collective $5,000 to the Salvation Army to swell its rellef fund. A gold medallion with a mule on one side and a goat on the other was used in the toss at the outset of the | geme, and it was auctioned off tonight at a charity ball for the relief fund's benefit, Long after the last crisp echo of the Army’s “Slum and Gravy” song and the Navy's battle yell had died in the far tlers of the stadium the merriment in charity’s name and for its benefit | continued at’ downtown hotels. The cadets and midshipmen themselves joined in these festivities. The Army lads had leaves until midnight when they returned to West Point. The Mid- shipmen had the night off, and will be carried back by train tomorrow to the banks of the Severn, the auction, starting with a $1,000 bid | | pointed to distribute employment cards CITIZENS DISTRIBUTE EMPLOYMENT CARDS Information Sought on Work Resi- dents of City Plan to Have Done. William A. Roberts, chairman of the Committee on Unemployment Relief of | the Federation of Citizens' Associations, Friday sent letters to the presidents of all nelghborhood citisens’ associations asking that special committees b ap- among the neighborhood residents. The cards, of which 15000 were printed for distribution by the feder- atlon, contain questionnaires asking the amount and nature of work the house- holders now have avallable for giving employment to unemployed persons. They were printed for the federation by the Commissioners'’ Committee on Un- employment, Rellef. SHIP BILLS DEFERRED Controversial Measures Likely to Be Withheld. By the Assoclated Press. President Hoover was told yesterday by Chairman White of the House Mer- | chant Marine Committee that no im. portant shipping legislation will be en- acted at this session. | It is too short for consideration of | controversial measures, White said. He placed radio legislation in the same category. Special Soap Sale Monday Only 10c Medium Size Ivory Soap Very Special 10 for 50c¢ Limit 10 to Customer No Soap Delivered rge Size Padres Wine Tonic Very Special $1.15 2 for $2.05 Free Delivery Wine Tonic GIBSON’S 919 G St. NW. PARADIN G CADETS AND MIDDIES THRILL AT FOOT BALL CLASSIC 5 g MINOR OFFENDER AMENDMENT URGED Christopherson to Seek 0. K. on Legislation Favored by Crime Body. By the Associated Press. A renewed drive to carry out recom- mendations of the Law Enforcement Commission and to exclude minor of- fenders from heavy penalties of the Jones-Stalker “Five and Ten” law will It was the first meeting of the two service institutions since 1927, when they | be made in the House this week. Representative _Christopherson, Re- publican, South Dakota, sald today he would ask the Judiclary Committee Wednesday to approve the Senate amendment to the Stobbs bill so that it can be passed and sent to the Presi- dept before the Christmas holidays. g‘he Stobbs bill classifies as petty of- fenses subject to a maximum penalty of $500 fine or six months in jail, the sale, unlawful making or transporta- tion of not more than one gallon of liquor. It passed both houses but the Senate added an amendment designed to prevent habitual offenders or viola- tors of the act written the last two years from getting the light sentences of petty offenders. NAVY SALE PLANNED Binoculars, Telescopes and Sextants to Be Offered January 5. ‘The Navy proposes to sell some 700 binoculars, about 300 telescopes and 7 sextants at the Washington Navy Yard on January 5. Conceding that some of these “eyes of the Navy” are part of the equipment called for by the service during the World War from the civilian lation of the country and which ave been since unclaimed, officials at the Navy Department yesterday said that the bulk of the property is of more recent manufacture. This equipment may be viewed from 9 a.m. to 4:30 o'clock on the fifth floor of Bu!ldlng No. 176 at the Washington Navy Yard between now and the date of proposed sale, officials sais GENERAL @ELECTRIC SUNLAMP ‘10 Delivered To Your Home for Only “Get All the Sunshine How often the doctor prescribes valescents. D potency...builds new vitality. But it’s elusive—especially in winter, when sunlight is weak in ultra-violet. You needn't suffer for lack of it. Sunlamp gives you the ultra-violet effectiveness of vital midsummer sunshine...any time...from an A.C. lighting outlet. z':esoozhlnl beam is safe and effective. tor. Four handsome models. See them tomorrow. Because its ultra-violet develops Vitamin 1930—P Al ONI. EXCESS HOUSING IN GAPITAL DENIED Lindholm Statement Draws Data From Rufus S. Lusk on Building Pace. The statement by S. G. Lindholm, engineer of the Zoning Commission, that Washington's housing facilities have been overbuilt, was challenged last night by Rufus S..Lusk, secretary of the Operative Builders’ Association. Mr. Lusk said that he does not question the accuracy of Mr. Lindholm’s figures, as set forth in a map the engi- neer prepared and which was published in the real estate section of The Star esterday. There is a much larger umber of housing facilities for families provided for during the last 10 years than in the actual increase in popula- tlon, Mr. Lusk asserted. 1920 Situation Cramped. . ‘Washington's house and apartment building situation was at a standstill in 1920, the city being cramped, he said, due to the cessation of construction during the World War. Had the city's population femained stationary from 1920 to 1930, he explained, Washington would have to build considerable houses. In the course of 10 years, Mr. Lusk slated, at least 10,000 units— houses and apartments—would be torn down or worn out. Surveys just completed by Rufus S. Lusk, Inc., he sald, show that compar- ing last month with November, 1929, there existed 7.1 per cent of vacancies of apartments, as compared with 9.9 per cent in last year, representing a reduction of about 30 'per cent in the number of vacant apartments. He esti- mates that there are about 40,000 apart- ments in the city and this is the lowest per cent apartment vacancy in five years. Los Angeles, he asserted, has not had a lower percentage than 20 in the case of apartments during the past five or six years. Vacancies Below Normal. i | Jail Threatens Girl as Payments On Solitaire Lapse Fiancees Warned to Get Bills of Sale When Given Engagement Rings. By the Associated Press. ‘CHICAGO, December 13.—Before say- ing “yes,” young lady, contemplate the unhappy plight of Miss Kathryn Mc- Mahon, who almost spent the week end in jail because her engagement ring was & couple of installments overdue. Haliled into court on a jeweler's $80 Ju ent, Miss McMahon protested she no longer possesses the solitaire in ques- tion. She was sorry and all that, but she had given it back to Lester Beckner of Belvidere, Ill, nor had she $80 to complete the payments on the $200 ring. ‘The county judge refused to jail the | girl and set for hearing January 19 her | petition as an insolvent debtor. Eligible young women will be warned by this occurrence to require bills of sale, receipts and credit vits from their intended flances. EINSTEIN CALLED MONARCH OF MIND Scientist Takes Tribute as to Al in His Line—To Speak Tomorrow. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, December 13.—Albert Einstein, “monarch of the infinite realm of the mind,” received today the high- est honor the metropolis of the Western World can pay. He accepted the tribute, not for him- self, but humbly as the incomprehensibly With reference to houses, Mr. Lusk sald the vacancies in old houses is 213 per cent, which is way below normal. New houses for sale represented 20 per cent less on Dle‘l::.lmber 1, compared with December 1 of t year. ‘Washington is not building too fast in the matter of homes, Mr. Lusk in- sisted, and the situation is improv- ing, as shown by the surveys. Fore- closures on houses for the last five months have averaged 25 per cent less than for the same period of last year, Mr. Lusk said. DOLORES SALAZAR | WEDS JOHN R. HOLMES Aotress Who Won $17,000 Suit Against Earle Bride of Late Flour Magnate's Son. By the Associated Press. LAS VEGAS, Nev., December 13.— The marriage here yesterday of Dolores L. Salazar, 22, film actress, and John R. Holmes, 21, son of the late Payton R. Holmes, Minneapolis flour magnate, was revealed today by District Judge William E. Orr, who performed the ceremony. Miss Salazar announced her engage: ment to young Holmes last Spring shortly after she had obtained $17,000 | damages from PFerdinand Pinney | (Affinity) Earle, artist now living in Paris, for alleged breach of a pre- nuptial agreemerit. The announcement, however, was denied emphatically by both Mrs. Payton Holmes and her son, the bridegroom, who were residing in | Minneapolis, where the young man at- tended the University of Minnesota. Later the actress also denied the en- gagement. Both the young people gave their home addresses as Los Angeles. The marriage recalled the lengthy trial of Miss Salazar's suit for damages against Earle. She charged she met him in 1926 and that he proposed to her, promising also to settle $15,000 on her before the marriage and agreeing to give her the lead in a motion picture he was producing. She said she accom- panied him to Mexico City, where a mock wedding was performed. In his_answer, made by deposition, Earle said he never had proj mar- riage to Miss Salazar, but she, “like & ripe peach, fell into my lap at my first smile.” BOOTLEGGER SUSPECTS SHOT BY FEDERAL AGENT Rancher Who Opened Fire May Die. Says He Thought Officer Was Hold-up Man. By the Associated Press. SANTA ROSA, Calif, December 13.— day. Hugo Prassa, 39, Lovall Valley ranch- er, was shot through the stomach and critically wounded. Antone Providenty, 22, San Francisco truck driver, suf- fered a slight wound. Buckley said he encountered Provi- denty on a lonely road near Sonoma. ‘When he halted Providenty, who was driving truck, Prassa, in an accom- panying automobile, opened fire, he de- clared. Prassa told officers he was driving about to frighten deer which had raided his crops, and opened fire on the dry agent when he believed the latter was holding up the truck driver. Prasss 150 ‘denied knowledge of a still found er the shooting. Down — T Months To Pay the Balance You Can!” sunshine for con- A General Electric Ask your GIBSON'’S 917 G ST. N. W, popular symbol of hundreds of men of sclence—the fillustrious and the ob- scure, the great and the lonely—work- ing in laboratories and class rooms al around the earth. In a brief reply in his native German, after he had been eulogized by Mayor James J. Walker and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia Univer- sity, he thanked New York for its formal welcome and said: Not Taken Personally. “I feel this reception is not for me personally, not as man to man, but is a recognition of all the scientific work that i5 being done the world over, not only by me, but by others.” To a crowded aldermanic reception chamber came the little gray-haired professor, who cannot understand why great masses of people, to whom his theories are incomprehensible, insist on making him a popular idol. Mayor Walker tried to explain it to him, while Einstein gazed at him shyly »ut of round, wondering eyes. The mayor assured him New Yorkers “have a very profound appreciation of the contribu- tions you have made to science, even if we don't understand them,” “You have the keys to our hearts” the mayor said, “and to our imagina- tlons. You have pald New York a great distinction and a great honor, and we appreclate it the more because we know you dislike receptions.” Introduced by Butler. As “s monarch of the mind, who rules over a territory not bounded by Wwidespread seas, by high mountains, or by any conventional line, which sepa- rates peoples and divides languages,” Prof. Einstein was introduced to the T ouhi T4 b rig ‘ - oug] g thtened,” Prof. Einstein told a group of news- paper men, after it was over, “but I Wwas not. There was s0 much sincerity in it all, I felt, perfectly at home.” ‘The New History Soclety, an ini- zation for world unity, announ to- y that Prof. Einstein will speak on ‘ar and Peace” at its meeting at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel at 9 o'clock tomor- row night. Appeals to Jews. An appeal to Jews of America not to be discouraged “by the difficulties which seem to face us at present in Palestine” was_broadcast today by Prof. Einstein. “Such experiences,” he said, “are the tests of the Jewish peo‘z}e’l will to live.” Asserting that ‘“undoubtedly certain statements and measures, taken and pronounced by British officials have been subject for just criticlsm,” he add- ed, however, that “we must learn the lesson of what has recently happened.” He urged the Jews to cultivate rela- tions with the Arab people to avoid for the future “those dangerous tensions which can be exploited for the purpose of provoking hostile action against us.” Australian Premier Visits Pope. VATICAN CITY, December 13 (4).— The Pope yesterday granted an audience to Prime Minister James Henry Scullin of Australia and Mrs. Scullin, DRY ADVERTISING FUND IS SWELLED $10,000,000 to Be Spent by Industrial Leaders to Show Benefits. Business men in many industries are planning to spend $10,000,000 in the next four years in a stupendous effort to carry to the American people through modern advertising a convincing mes- sage of the economic benefits of na- tional prohibition. While leaders of temperance crmd- izations canvass suggestions for un activity in the 1932 presidential elec- tion, manufacturers and other employ- ers of thousands of men and women are quietly carrying on an educational mpaign unparalleled in the 11 years since the eighteenth amendment was adopted. Three million dollars will be spent in the next twelve months and four million dollars the next year for newspaper advertising designed to blan- ket the country. Prominent Men on Board. ‘The American Business Men's Prohi- bition Foundation, incorporated as a non-profit-taking organization under the laws of Illinois, is the parent body. Serving on its advisory board are 50 prominent college presidents, manufac- turers, lawyers, business men and editors. ‘The movement represents the deter- mination of the contributors to pre. sent prohibition as an economic neces- sity rather than as an accomplishment in morality. Wet Newspapers Prejudiced. Charles Redding Jones of Chicago, chairman of the foundation, has been engaged for several years in furnishing press releases supporting prohibition to newspapers and magazines. A study of these results last year revealed that dry editors were using the matter in some form, but that in wet newspaper, espe- clally in the cities, the drys were getting only 10 lines of printed matter to 75 lines supporting the ples for modification or repeal. ‘Willis J. Abbot, editor of the Chris tian Science Monitor and a staunch prohibition supporter, is a member of the foundation’s board of advisers. Others include Amos Alonzo Stagg, di- rector of athletics at the Unfy ity of Chicago; Herbert T. Ames, Philadel- phia lawyer; R. B. Benjamin, manufac- turer, Chicago; Mrs. H. W. Peabody, chairman of the Women's Nationai Committee for Law Enforcement: Louls J. Tabor, master of the National Grange; Zona Gale, author, and Fred W. Ellsworth, New Orleans banker, COLORED ELKS TO HOLD MEMORIAL SERVICES | Special Musical Program Is Ar- ranged for Meeting at Arm- strong Auditorium. Columbia Lodge, No. 85, and Colum- bia Temple, No. 422, I. B. P. O. E. of Washington, will conduct memorial services in the Armstrong High School Auditorium tonight at 8 o'clock. Herbert E. Jones, exalted ruler, will preside at opening services. Rev. Frank Williams will give the invocation. Joseph H. Munnerlyn and Luella Johnson will deliver the eulogies. Georgia Henry will be mistress of cere- monies, while the address of welcome will be given by Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham. Music will be provided by the Elks Band of 46 pl un e’tml. 8. um‘!’:::rwm“mr itk . Bonn m‘n.lgf the Oommlm hmm ments. Iy Exhibit Apartment for Rent Beautifully furnished in l-fl Antiaues, Gara in bul‘l:.lbl'.‘”m. b See Manager LEGATION APARTMENTS 5420 Connecticut Ave. Or Call Cleveland 6076 EDISON STEWART WARNER RADIO SETS Sold on Easy Terms Your Old Set in Trade There are none Better amd Few as Good. GIBSON’S 917 G St. N.W. FUR COATS At Cheap Cloth Coat Prices! A Small SLIGHTLY USED COATS P‘fl.fl BRAND NEW FUR GOATS by ors AV B "‘339.15 rs_have l’:" .;:H.ul fn':-_f‘mh ana'ln Deposit Holds Any Coat Till Wanted PARKER FUR SHOP 922 F Street N. W. Come study the “ever- lasting Rollator”, the record breaking, aston- ishing cold maker built into every Norge—for it saves and serves beyond any precedent. A mechanical wonder —a world wide suc- cess. Attend our special display—todas Product rg-W Made b?m: C.u-v;. see N ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION CARROLL SURP (Formerly Carro 7T 1%h Bt N.W.

Other pages from this issue: