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HEST TRUSTEES LAN NOMINATIONS I_Lnual Board Meeting to Be {Held at Chamber of Com- merce Tomorrow. The annual mesting of the new Board of Trustees of the Community Chest will be held tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 o'tlock in the United States Chamber of Commerce Building. Nominations to fill Chest officers for 1931 will be sub- mitted by the Nominating Committee, of which Frank R. Jelleff is chairman. Additional nominations may be made from the floor. Changes in the by-laws, on which the trustees will vote, contemplate enlarg- ing the scope of the Community Chest to include urban and suburban terri- tory adjacent to the District of CD-I lumbia in the Chest plan of organiza- lon. ‘The Board of Trustees consists of one board member and one staff mem- ber of each Chest organization, or 124 members representing 62 Chest agencies and 93 members representing the con- tributors, which give the board a_total of 217 members. Trustees representing the contributors were elected at the an- nual meeting of the Chest and the agencies have sent in their list of mem- bers for 1931, so that the board meeting tomorrow will be a new board. Agency Trustees Given. Trustees representing the agencies are as follows: American Legion, Miss Mary A. Hickey, Maj. Gen. Amos A. Fries; As- sociated Charities, Miss Helen Nicolay, Walter 8. Ufford; Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, Mrs. Joseph Sanders, Wallace Hatch; Boys’ Club, Charles M. Fyfe, Frank R. Jelleff; Boy Scouts, Linn C. Drake, Arthur J. May; Bureau of Rehabilitation, Rudolph Jose, J. E. Dayton; Catholic Charities, Rev. Dr. John O'Grady, Allen Pope; Chil- dren's Hospital, T. B. Sweeney, Miss Mattie M. Gibson; Child Welfare So- clety, Mrs. Frederick DeC. Faust, Miss Caroline Sweeney; Children’s Country Home, Mrs. Joseph H. Himes, A. M. Nevius; Christ Child Society, Mrs. Dud- ley Morgan, Miss Martina V. Pleace; Citizens' Relief Association, Evan H. ‘Tucker, Thomas S. Settle; Columbia Hospital, Sidney F. Taliaferro, Dr. S. B. ; Columbia Polytechnic' Insti- tute for the Blind, H. R. W. Miles, Adolph G. Ramisch; Council of Social Agencies, Mrs. W. A. Roberts, Willard C. Smith; Congress of Parents and ‘Teachers, Walter -B. Fry, Mrs. E. J. Dowling; Disabl:d American Veterans, H. L. Sothoron, sr., and Earl G. Hend- rick; Emergency Hospital,- Harry King, Woodbury Blair; Episcopal Home for Children, Mrs. Lila P. DuVal, Mrs. David Meade Lea; Episcopal Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital, H. P. Blair, Rev. Calvert E. Buck; Florence Critténton Home, Mrs. Thomas E. Robertson, Miss Jean S. Cole; Friendship House Asso- ciation, Mrs. Wilhelm Krechting, Miss Lydia A. H. Burklin; Garfield Memorial Hospital, H. B. Spencer, Dr. Francis J. Eisemann; Georgetown University Hos- pital, Sister M. Rochus, Miss Beatrice Mullin; George Washington University Hospital, Mrs. Jessie Fant Evans, Dr. Cloyd H. Marvin; Girl Scouts, Mrs. Henry . Flather, Miss Dorothy E. Greene; Hebrew Free Loan Association, Bernard Danzansky, Charles Rappa- port; Hebrew Home for the Aged, Simon Hirshman, Charles A. Goldsmith; Holy Family Day Nursery, Mrs. Manolah Brennan, Henry L. Quinn; Holiday House, Mrs. Alexander 8. Stewart, Miss Clara R. Nourse; Instructive Nurse Society, Miss Gertrude H. Bowl~ ing, Mrs. Whitman Cross; Jewish Com- munity Center, Morris Gewirz, Maurice k‘ytr; Jewish Welfare Federation, hur J. Sundlun, Oscar Leonard; Jewish Foster Home, Boris L. Eisenberg, David L. Frank; Juanita K. Nye Coun- cil House, Miss Gertrude Cone. Miss Bertba R. Israel; Juvenile Protective Association, Mrs. Donncl F. Hewett, Miss Mildred Terrett; Mother Child Center, Mrs. B. Beatrice Scott, Miss A. V. Smith; National Capital Civic Fund, ‘William Montgomery, Miss Sibyl Baker; National Homeopathic Hospital, Dr. B. G. Custis, Miss Elizabeth Colema Neighborhood House, Mrs. J. Neligh, Mrs. Joseph M. Stoddard; Nocl Community House, A. Boyd Hinds, Miss Mary Thom; Phyllis Wheatley Y. W. C. A, Mrs. Julla West Hamilton, Mrs. M. A. McAdoo; Providence Hospital, Sister Camilla, Sister Marie; Salvation Army, Thomas P. Hickman, Maj. James Asher; St. Anna’s Home, Maj. Ennalls Waggaman, Miss Mary Cromwell; St. Ann’s Infant Asylum, Sister Rose, Sis- St. Home and Sohon; ‘Tec! Sister Ellen, Sister Mary Gabriel; Vincent’s Home and School, M. P. Cal- THE SUNDAY GORGEOUS HUES OF SPRING HIDE WEST’S DRAB SEMI-ARID WASTES Mesa and Arroyo, From Sierras to Mojave, Buried Under Colors of Wild Flowers. By the Assoclated Press. BAKERSFIELD, Calif., March 14. Desert and semi-arid wastes are bloom- ing from the western slopes of the Sierras to the Mojave. Mesa and arroyo, burned brown but a few short months ago, have been transformed by Winter's rainfall into vistas of gorgeous color. Such is the picture that will greet visitors to the annual wild flower fes- tival at Arvin, near here, tomorrow. ‘The broad reaches of historic Rancho El Tejon will be thrown open and the public can wander through thousands of l(‘:’?les of blossoms, picking armfuls at will. Gorgeous long-stemmed poppies, blue lupin, golden buttercups, squaw cab- bage, brodiaea—whatever the fancy de- sires—is there. Hill and vale are a blaze of red, yellow, orange, white and purple. Birds eye, fiddle neck, red maid, baby biue eye, owl's. clover, daisies, filaree and what not beckon the lover of nature’s own. The floor of the San Joaquin Val- ley strefches for miles in an endless splash of color. Out on the desert wastes beyond Mojave the gorgeous desert flowers are blooming, bathing an ordinary drab landscape in tones of varied hue. With a lavish hand nature has painted a picture that opens the flesta season in California. Mrs. Carter Keene, Mrs. Wymond Brad- bury; Stoddard Baptist Home, Rev. George A. Parker, Rev. W. A. Taylor; Travelers’ Aid Society, Arthur D. Moses, Mrs. Margaret For ‘Twelfth Street Branch Y. M. C. A, 5.-W. Rutherford, Maj. Campbell C. Johnson; United He- brew Relief Society, Mrs. Charles Gold- smith, Joseph Tepper; Washington Animal Rescue League, Miss N. R. Ma- comb, Mrs. Truman G. Palmer; Wash- ington Co-operative Society, Mrs. Wil- liam J. Flather, jr, and Mrs. Richard ‘Wilmer; Washington Home for Found- lings, Joseph Fairbanks, Miss L. Eliza- beth Thomas; Washington Institute for Mental Hygiene, Mrs. Harvey Wiley, Dr. Paul J. Ewerhardt; Washington Welfare Society, Dr. Dorothy B. Ferebee, Miss Marion G. Conover; Young Men's Christian Association, Houston Thomp- son, Leonard W. DeGast, and the Young Women's Christian Assoclation, Miss Margaret R. Fox, Miss Hettie P. Ander- son. Members’ Trustees Announced. Trustees representing contributing members are: W. B. Acker, Arthur Adelman, Clar- ence A. Aspinwall, Maj. Henry O. At- wood, Dr. Frank W. Ballou, Mrs, Harry Frank A. Birgfeld, Mrs. Frances Boyce, Mrs. Frederic H. Brooke, Mrs. Thomas Edwin Brown, Wilbur J. Carr, Merritt O. Chance, Dwight Clark, Judge James A. Cobb, Edward F. Colladay, Mrs. Coralie F. Cook, W. 8. Corby, James A. Councilor, Rev. J. Homer Councilor, Mrs. James F. Curtis, Maj. J. D. Cutter, Rev. W. L. Darby, Audus T. Davis, Frederic A. Delano, Clarence P. Joshua Evans, jr.; W. W. Everett, Capt. N. B. Farwell, William J. Flather, jr.; Robert V. Fleming, Bishop James E. Freeman, J. Louis Gelbman, C. C. Glover, jr.; E. C. Graham, Col. U. S. Grant, 3d: Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor, Willlam F. Ham, Col. West A. Hamilton, John Hays Hammond, John H. Hanna, John W. Hardell, Dr. George C. Havenner, Arthur Hellen, Mrs. Archibald Hopkins, Ernest Lee Jahncke, Coleman Jennings, Edmund F. Jewell, Ernest S. Johnston, Joseph D. Kaufman, John Koons, Mark Lansburgh, W. Libbey, Sidney Lust, Simon Lyomy Reed F. Martin, James M. McDonald, Bishop William F. McDowell, George B. McGinty, Marvin McLean, Bishop J. McNamara, Rabbi Solomon Metz, Dr. Kelly Miller, William Montgomery, Capt. Sidney Morgan, George Hewitt Myers, Dr Charles P. Neill, Newbold Noyes, Mrs. John J. O’Connor, Chauncey G. Parker, jr.; Mrs. Eleanor G. Patterson, Fred- erick H. Payne, Gen. John J. Pershing, E. R. Pierce, John Poole, Maj. Henry G. Pratt, R. M. se, Dr. Luther Reichelderfer, William E. Russell, H. L. Rust, jr.; Dr. Abram Simon, Gen. Anton Stephan, Charles E. Stewart, Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes, Marshal Ed- gar C. Snyder, Sidney F. Taliaferro, Mrs. Sidney P. Taliaferro, Miss Mary H. Tate, Corcoran Thom, Joseph P. Tumulty, W. W. Wheeler, Robe Carl White, George S. Wilson, Bernard Wyckoff, G. M. Yeatman and Edward G. Yonker. Piedmont Field Trials Set. LYNCHBURG, Va., March 14 (Spe- cial) —Field trials of the Piedmont Fox Hunters’ Association will be held Octo- ber 15, in the vicinity of Lynchburg. A committee composed of W. C. Black- well, Sweet Briar; W. T. Oakes, Gladys and C. G. Patterson, Lynchburg, is to locate the site for the trial Two Rooms, Kitchen and Bath Electrical Refrigeration THE ARGONNE 16th and Columbia Road Reasonable Rentals SMITHS MOVES&STORES FURNITURE OFALLKINDS 1313 YOU STREET, N PHONE NO.3 3423345 H. Baum & Son, 616 E St. N.W. This. Week’s Specials Are Outstanding Values in «\Worthwhile” Bedroom Furniture ‘We do not handle any merchandise that does not stand the “acid test” for Quality of Cabinet and upholstery work and materials. The fact that we sell at such recognizably low prices, for like goods, is because we handle Manufacturers’ “floor samples”’ and “close-outs” bought at real bargain prices to us. We list three leaders for this week— 1—4-piece Chinese Chippendale Bed Room Suite, full size Bed, Vanity Dresser, Chest of Drawers and Vanity Chair. its Wholesale Pricf ls- 331500 o 5 l 75.00 This week's price here 3 Antique Maple Bed Room Suites—S5 pieces—full size Bed, Dresser, Vanity Dresser, Chest of Drawers and Chair. Why olesale Price Is $175.00 This week’s price here .. $145.00 1—Mahcgany Bed Room Suite—a Hepplewhite repro- duction. Dresser and Chair, This week’s price Full size Bed, Dresser, Chest of Drawers, Vanity D. C, MARCH 15, 1931—PART ONE. in the country badly damaged. “The question is one of tios nomics— = not one of politics,” he said. “The time has come for every one to realize that. MAY BE CALLED Governors Would Consider Limiting Production and Eliminating Waste. n By the Associated Press. ‘Europe Administration officials are comtder} 15 Boviet Ot ing the calling of a conference of oil- State Governors to discuss a compact for limitation of production and elim- ination of waste in the oil industry. Members of the Federal Oil-conserva- tion Board said yesterday that if these Governors felt such a meeting might be beneficial, & formal recommendation would be made that President Hoover reconvene the Colorado Springs confer- ence of 1929, With a complete agreement expected among principal importers drastically to limit imports, after negotiations fos- tered by the board, some of its members said they have gone as far as they can unless officials of the oil States indicate a desire further to improve conditions. The next move, they sald, must come from the oil States. Secretary Wilbur, a member of the board, said the industry is faced with a stabilized and fully grown market, and a rapidly expanding production. Unless the States take a hand as, a unit, he said, a great natural resource will be wasted, and the third largest industry DISTRICT GR(: Our Stores Deliver will be the subject of by V. F. Calverton, author, critic and lecturer. The Federal Government is helpless to glvau n‘l:mnee except where the States Gesire it.” TALK ON SOVIET AUTHORS ‘W. F. Calverton to Speak on New Challenge in Literature. “The Soviet Challenge in Literature” an to- ight at the Playhouse, 1814 N street, Mr. Calverton recently returned from and a survey of conditions in Fa DELICIOUS CHOCOLATE VITAMINS B &G For Sale at All Fannie May Shops ONLY 1010 F Si. N.W.—1354 F St. N.W. 1406 N. Y. Ave—1704 Pa. Ave. N.W. 3305 14th St. N. For Information Call Met. 4662 BACK TO NORMALCY old Bag COFFEE GOOD WITH EVERY MEAL POUND p . ] ANSBURGH’S 7th, 8th and E Sts.—NAtional 9800 No Connection With Any Other Washington Store BASEMENT STORE Another Sale for Those Who Were Disappointed Last Monday . . Women Bought These Dresses Two and Three at a Time . . . By 2 O’Clock the Sizes Were Incomplete . . . But Now 500 More 100% Silk Printed Dresses At the Same Low Price $2.79 Imagine an all-silk dress in a gay Spring floral design at $2.79! Dainty, feminine affairs with soft, frilly neck- lines, vestees, peplume and fitted hiplines that gracefully swing into flared skirts! Neat patterns, flattering to any type figure—on light and dark grounds. Sizes 14 to 40 and 42 to 50. Mail and Phone Orders Filled By Jane Stuart nan, Paul Johnson; Social Hygiene So- Eamr st | H, BAUM & SON mb.mn. Croxton; Bflmuth:n Relief so-I 6'6 E S"’- N.W. Belw"nN:l:!; ;Tga 7th Sts. It won’t be long NOW! before the Rob-Rob-Robin comes Bob-Bob-Bobbin' aloni. Why not meet Spring at least half way? Dress up and pep up. 1931 is the “come-back” year. - M}W’ Genuine Gotham Shock-Bilt Seven Jewel Watches $9.85 50c a week D A Ccllahce to BuEy a S;nart EASTER COAT Ata Very Low Price! $13.75 Never have we had smarter Spring coats at this very moderate price! They are shown.in the loveliest sheer wool crepes, loose mesh woolens, tricolaine, tweeds, and even velvet! And the size range is exceptionally large—coats for the tiny miss 111 to the one who wears a 44! Here.s Our Reason for Shouting m 19% Topcoats Super-Value 2-TROUSER 25 SPRING SUITS In 1930 the Same Quality Sold for $30 If you knew that such a watch were obtainable, you wouldn’t wait for a sale! How often have you wanted to give a practical watch to school boy or girl, to a Boy Scout? How often have you wanted one yourself for goif, for tennis, baseball, fishing, hiking, riding? These Important Features! Shock-bilt, accurate 7-jewel move- ment. Delicate design, no clumsy appear- ance. Armor-edge white metal mesh band. Luminous figures and hands. Slip- over band! A watch for everybody. you our great dis- play. “Open 9 am. to 6 p.m., except Sunday. Glazing Est. 1883 Globe Ernest Bros Columbia Pottery 1109 Bladensburg Road 5. 8 Blocks North of 15th & H tlantic Dazzling Spring HAND MADE PLATES OUR SPECIALTY Perfect Fitting Plates and Bridges SPRING HATS IN PROFUSION T g _years of ex- bl e ) ral looking teeth. Come Beau Geste Stetsons SANITARY—GUARANTEED OUR LOW PRICES HOME OF SMITH SMART SHOES g 0 _Plain or Fur Trimmed The plain coats have scarf collars, nice fitted lines, and interesting sleeve details. The fur-trimmed costs have -, scarf and cowl necklines of American i broadtail. pistes Oral 'hygienist and ttendance. DR. FREIOT 407 7th St. N. W America’s Oldest Credit Jewelers 1004 F STREET N.W. ..‘CO....‘.... Money's Worth or Money Back D.J Kaufman - 1005 PENNA. AVE. 1744 PENNA. AVE. SOUTHEAST CORNER |4TH E