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INDEPENDENCE DAY ~ INCUBA TROUBLED Nationalists Charged With Conspiracy to Overthrow Government. Bythe Associated Press. i HAVANA, May 20.—The membership | of the Nationalist Union, 500,000 strong, ‘was charged today with complicity in a conspiracy to overthrow the government of President Gerardo Machado by armed force. - This is Independence day and the “sixth anniversary of Senor Ma- chado's election. The judicial and secret police filed a deposition with the Court of Instruc- tion, Fourth Section, alleging that mem- bers of the union, students and em- ployes of six opposition publications were plotting a revolution. No arrests ‘were made. President transmitted a | message to Congress in which he said that “unrest persists” and threatened to again suspend constitutional guar- anfees in the provinces if necessary to avold “a very disagreeable situation.” ‘The réstoration of guarantees, he said, had resulted in action “prejudicial to the maintenance of order.” He later issued an Independence day statement to the people which said, in Machado have in my possession positive proof that we are living in a period of seditious propaganda, subversive plans and of attempts to deceive a power, which, though foreign, is friendly be- cause it placed in its code, in order to make our republic live forever, a decla- | ration of our right to sovereignty and self-government.” Meanwhile the atmosphere was tense with rumors ol impending trouble. ‘Troops were on the alert for outbreaks and Camaguey guard. pamphlets were being circulated, but opposition leaders insisted that no mani- festations were planned for today. RUM SEARCH BANNED Chieago Mayor Adopts Policy of Hands Off Toward Home Brewers. CHICAGO, Mla 20 (#).—The Chicago | Tribune said y that Mayor Anton & k announced a police policy | that eliminates looking for evidence of | wige or beer ing for home con-| sumption. “I think that the mu have suffi- ‘clent work to do wi the back t snooping at doors of hom: the bune the mayor as saying. “I don't lice should be concerned ‘manufacture of wine or the homes which is intended for home consumption.” l THE WEATHER | m:mcr. o!wcdug:&sm-m to- morning, cooler tonight and tomorrow, moderate to fresh %‘t‘.hm shifting to ending night and tomorrow, w%m shifting to northwest winds. dy with showers .01; .m., .03 Highest temperature, 84, occurred at ¥:15 pm. yesterday. Lowest temperature, 67, occurred at 5:30 a.m., today. Temperature same date last year— Highest, 73; lowest, 57. Tide Tables. (Purnished by United States Coast and etic Survey, ‘Today—Low tide, 4:00 am. and 5:00; THE ' EVENING- STAR, WASHINGTON, RESERVE MARINES | Formation of Sixth Brigade Called Greatest Forward Step Since War. Formation of the 6th Marine Brigads reserve organization with headqua in Washington, has been suthorized by Maj. Gen. Ben H. Fuller, Marine commandant, it was an-| Establishment of the new unit will constitute the greatest forward step in Marine reserve expansion since the World War, it was said. The major detachments of the brigade will be the 20th and 23d Marines, Infantry regi- ments composed of District, Virginia and uuzlmd troops, and the 1st Bat- talion of the 23d Marines, a Phila- delphia Artillery unit. Listed as an expeditionary force, sub- ject to call in a national emergency, the new brigade headquarters will con- “|sist of service companies, a band of 60 men, motor transport, signal and detachments. The 20th Ma- rines, a r ent now in its second year, will be reorganized into two bat- talions of three rifle companies and one machine gun company to each bat- 1 e usual regimental and battalion headquarters troops. e 23d Marines will be modeled after the 20th. Recruif will be carried on each Monday night at brigade headquarters, 458 Indiana avenue. Vacancies will be filled in the rifle, machine gun service and signal companies as well as the band and motor transport section. | There also will be vacancies for trum- ters and cooks. The age limits will from 18 to 35. No previous military training wis be utgnred. The site for the brigade's camp early in September has not been selected. Lieut. Col. J. J. Staley, formerly in e"v:mmh:nd of rthe 20&:\1M-rirfiu. wm;v charge of organizing the brigade. Maj. Harvey L. Milier has been placed | in command of the 20th Marines, while | Maj. Earl C. Lane is to be in charge of the 33d Marines. Lieut. Comdr. Don | 8. Knowlton will be the brigade sur- geon. Members of Congress included in the personnel will be Cant. Vircent M. Carter of Wyoming, Andrew L Somers of New York and L. W. Hopkins of Missouri. Lieut. Arthur E. Harper will have charge of the band. Capt. Carmen A Newcomb, jr., commissioner, Court of Claims, has been chosen as the brigade ymaster. The brigade engineer de- chment, unler Lieut. J. E. O'Brien, will maintain headquarters at Catholic University. Company E. 2d Battalion, 20th M: | rines, commanded by Lieut. Collins, as- sistant principal of Eastern High School will be composed principally of Eastern graduates. Upper: NEWBOLD NOYES, Lower: JOHN HAYS HAMMOND. ORATORY FINALS PLANS COMPLETE John Hays Hammond to Pre- sent Loving Cup to Na- tional Champion. Newbold Noyes, associate editor of ‘The Star, sponsoring newspaper of the | CAPT. PRESTON DIES contest in this locality, will announce | AT MARYLAND HOME the victor and the second and third bonor winners in the Natlonal Ora-| Retired Naval Officer Served inj torical Contest finals in Constitution | P World and Spanish Wars. Hall Saturday night, it was made Funeral Tomorrow. known at contest headquarters today when the final three officlals of the meeting were announced. | John Hays Hammond, internationally famous engineer and honorary presi- dent of the Constitution Club, an or- ganization of former oratory contes- tants, will present the silver loving cup to the national champion. Bingham to Speak. Randolph Leigh, director general of | the contest, will preside, introducing Senator Hiram Bingham of Connecti- cut, who will deliver the opening ad- ‘The Tech Orchestra of the MecKinley High School will provide the accom- panying musical xmnm under the | direction of Dore Walten, faculty leac er. Washington high schools will have | a place on the program also, through | Western High School, whose cadets, in | uniform, will act as ushers and aides | In publishing these final plans of the contest, Mr. Leigh emphasized the im- portance of time to ticket holders. The doors of Constitution Hall will be opened that night at 7:15 o'clock for the admittance of holders of tickets. At 7:45 o'clock—15 minutes before the contest begins—the tickets will lapse Capt. Charles Prancis Preston, U. 8. N.. retired, veteran of the Spanish- | American and World Wars and widely known in this city, where he formerly cresided, died of heart attack at his country home at Ruxton. Md., yester- day. He was 60 years old. Capt. Preston was on duty here at the Bureau of Naval Operations, Navy | Department, until retired from active service in November, 1925. He was s member of the Chevy Chase and Army and Navy Clubs and former member |of the Metropolitan Club here. | Berving in the Navy for nearly 40 g.url, Capt. Preston commanded the ttleship Maryland for two years after she was placed in commission in 1921. ‘The son of John F. Preston of Bi timore, Capt. Preston was graduated from the Naval Academy in 1891. Dur- ing the Spanish-American War he was | feutenant on & line ship and there-| after he spent a number of years in naval work on the Pacific Coast. At | the beginning of the World War Capt. Preston was placed in command of the ;l“bm“‘ln:chv::"“ ,Suén Pedr?,hctm‘ and the door bars will be let down to | orre o s aen Gl the general public. Hence, at 7:45 | U0DS for his services in'the world 10 BE ORGANIZED| LIEUT. COL. J. J. STALEY (upper). MAJ. EARL C. LANE (lower). | RUMANIA SWEPT BY ELECTION ROTS Several Casualties Reported| as Government Acts to Defeat Peasant Party. BY JOHN GUNTHER. By Cable tz The Btar. | VIENNA, Austria, May 20.—Election riots with several casualties are reported in various parts of Rumania toaay as | the opposition of the National peas- | ants to the regime of King Carol and Premier Nicolas Jorga grows. | A government official communique | takes the responsibility for maintain- | ing order, which may mean impending | Tepressive measures. It is reported, but | not confirmed, that press censorship ge- | gins today of all newspapers in Ru- | mania, in an effort to embarrass the | National peasant campaign. Three Are Murdered. The mayor of the Transylvanian town | of Mezoetelegd, belonging to the Liberal | party, shot and killed a National peas- ant agitator affer an election meeting. In the village of Tovarhegy, also in | Transylvania, a National peasant named Theodor Moll, was seized by a mob and beaten to death. | In Secuen! village in old Rumania, National peasant named Andreas Operd :l‘e‘d stabbed in an election brawl and 5 | Other outrages are reported, but be- cause of the uncertainty in the trans- mission of Rumanian names, they may refer to the incidents above. The gov vernment charges the National peasants | with rsponsibility for the riots, saying | that the people were induced by pro- | fessional agitators to disobey the orders of magistrates, Peasants Are Furious. The national peasants, who are con- | increase o'clock persons will be admitted to the | COict. auditorium whether they have tickets | centrating their campaign in their his- Capt. Preston is survived by his | torlc stronghold, Transylvania, are lu-‘ widow, Mrs. Prances M. Preston; a son, | rious because the new minister of in-| 1 o S4400 INVOLVED INGOALSALE RO Crosser Tells Officials Changel to 2,000-Pound Unit Would Cest That Much. ‘The sale of coal by the long ton in- stead of by the short ton, or 2,000~ pound unit means & saving of $444.- 000 to Washington consumers, accord- ing to Representative Robert Crosser of Ohio, who has backed the superin- tendent of weights and measures in the contention that only the sale of coal by the long ton is allowed here by law. Mr. Crosser seeks to prove this in a letter to the Commissioners, which follows: Holds Contention Wrong. “Since my discussion with District officials of the disregard by some coal sellers of the legal requirement for selling coal by the long ton, an effort has been made to show that consumers have received a corresponding reduction in price. In other words, it is claimed that objections to the disregard of the legal standard are of no practical im- portance to the public. “Investigation, however, shows that the disregard of the legal standard by coal sellers is of real importance to the consumer. “Mine prices of egg, stove and chest- nut sizes of anthracite coal are con- siderably lower this Spring than they were last Spring. The prices of pea and buckwheat sizes at the mines have slightly advanced. Washington con- sumers have not, however, received the full benefit of the mining companies’ reductions, and on the other hand have been compelled to pay ccnsiderably more for Pea and buckwheat than the charged by the mines to ‘Washington coal sellers. Prices Are Quoted. “Spring prices, so-called, were in- I;Ag;xgr;ted in May of 1930, and in April o 1. “Calculated on the basis of the ‘short' ton, one of the best grades of egg coal used for household purposes was sold in the Spring of 1930 by the mines at $743. It was sold at retall in Washington at $12.59. In the Spring of this year, it was sold by the mines at $6.75, and at retall in Washington at $12.50. “Stove coal was sold at the mines in 1930 at $7.88, and at retall in Washing- ton at $13.17. In 1931 it sold at the mines at $7.00, and at retail in Wash- ington at $12.75. “Chestnut was sold at the mines in 1930 at $7.43, and at retail in Washing- ton at $1272. In 1931 it sold at the mines at $7.00 and at retail in Wash- ington at $12.75. “Pea «coal was sold at the mines in 1930 at $4.13, and at retail in Wash- ington at $8.83. 1In 1931 it sold at the mines at $4.95, and at retail in Wash- ington at $10. “Buckwheat was sold at the mines in 1930 at $2.87, and at retail in Wash- ington at $7.59. In 1931 it sold at the mines at $3.45, and at retail in Wash- ton at $8.25.” Increase Held $444,00 “Inquiry as to other anthracite coals . indicates similar increases in profits. , “The yearly sale of coal in Washing- ton is abeut 1,200,000 short tons. Cal- culated on the basis of the average of the increases in profit mentioned, the total increase in profits on coal paid this year by Washington consumers would be $444,000. “It has always been evident that in arbitrarily changing the basis for selling coal the obvious purpose was to compel the consumer to buy in terms with which he is unfamiliar. The buyer, thus confused, can be charged a higher profit on coal which he may buy. “These facts, it is submifted, justify enforcement of the law against all of- fenders.” LEADING SCIENTISTS HONORED BY TABLET Stone Memorial Bearing 28 Names Unveiled at Pennsylvania College for Women. By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH, Pa, May 20.—The names of 28 of America’s foremost WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1931. Truck Dives From Bridge ALEXANDRIA LAD INJURED WHEN VEHICLE TAKES 40-FOOT PLUNGE. possible internal injuries. Detective Sergt. Edgar Sims of investigated the accident. EARING down two sections of guard rall on the bridge over Potomac Yards, at Alexandria, Va., this mcrning, a truck driven by a 13-year-old boy dropped 40 feet to the tracks below. The lad, Joseph J. Hickman of 1318 Madison street, received a broken right wrist, head injuries and He was taken to the Alexandria Hospital by 77 delCX'lndAl‘lLl p(;l:;::, wlho with other officers ccording to Alexan before driven the fruck, which was loaded with fishe Trie track belsaged oo C. H. Pettey of 609 South Lee street, Alexandria. The truck belonged to Traffic was slowed up con< siderably for a time by the large crowd whla:!} gathered on the bridge to view the accident. +—Star Staff Photo. Tobacco Seeds Rich Food Scientists Find Rats Thrive on Diet—No Nicotine in Unsprouted Grain, But Number of Vitamins Are Indicated in Carnegie Institution Tests. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. Tobacco for breakfast food! Such, at least, is the possible impli- | cation of nutrition experiments reported by the Carnegie Institution of Wash- ington. The seeds of the tobacco plant have & high food value and include three of the essential vitamins in “reasonable abundance,” according to the report of experiments conducted at Yale Univer- | sity with the support of the Carnegie | Institution. Tests on rats showed that any traces of the poisonous alkaloid, nicotine, cannot be demonstrated. Rats fed on a diet consistin, tobacco seed grew at ihe average nor- mal rate for 109 days and showed no 1ll effects. They ate the seed greedily. Contains Vitamins. ‘Thus, says the report, “there is rea- soh to believe that tobacco seed con tains proteins of good biological qual ity and that it includes at least vitamins A, B and D in reasonable abundance. No advantage seems to accrue from ad- ditions of & more complex salt mixture to this upusual ration. The further study of the nutritive factors in the to- bacco_seed is being prosecuted vigor- | ously.” “It was noted during & preliminary study of the seed,” the report continues, “that nicotine, while entirely absent from the unsprouted seed, was present in conspicuous amounts in the sprouts that develop in about 12 days when the of 99 per cent | seeds are scattered on blotting paper moistened with distilled water. It is evident that this alkaloid is synthesized very early in the life of the plant.” The Carnegie workers are trying to find out where the nicotine, a deadly poison in its pure state, comes from. Chemical analysis shows the seed con- tains a high proportion of fat and a very low proportion of carbohydrates, thus somewhat resembling the soy bean and various ofly nuts. A method has been devised, the report states, to extract the protein content of the seed and a study of its chemical properties now is under way. The in- vestigators are especially interested in the various water-soluble substances which may be present in the alkaline content. Thus far have been demon- strated the presence of five bio-chem- lcal substances—choline, an alkaline substance found in the yolks of eggs; betaine, found in beets; adenine, a product of growing plant cells; arginine and guanine. But there is no trace of nicotine, the alkaloid peculiar to to- bacco itself. Somehow or other, it is created in the laboratory of the grow. ing plant. Find Another Alkaloid. In connection with the chemieal work, it is announced, an easy method has been found for the preparation of nico- tine. of high purity. The workers also isolated pure nicotimine, a little known volatile alkaloid that accompanies nico- tine in tobacco, but is quite different, chemically, from the poison itself. WADOO HAS PLANE FOR BUSY ROUTINE éNoled U. S. Leader Revealed as Sportsman, Attorney and Humorist. * (Copyright, 1831, by the Associated Press.) LOS ANGELES, May 20.—William Gibbs McAdoo, at 67 years of age, lives every minute of every day and has as many personal uu:qmlnunm perhaps as any man in the United States. Trains and motors are too slow for him, 50 he does most of his extensive traveling by air. He owns his own plane and has as his personal pilot Harry Ashe, World War veteran. His plane will develop speed of 200 miles an hour, although he does not always g0_s0 fast. Intimates of the man who bullt the Hudson tunnels and was Secretary of the Treasury and director general of rallways say only Willigm Jennings Bryan knew as many pedple scattered throughout the United States. Recalls Political Race. McAdoo flew from Los ‘Washin, actual Angeles to in 16 hours and 21 minutes, lying time. When told it was time,” McAdoo, with a thought of his unsuccessful fight for the Demo- cratic nomination for President, said: “Yes, one can go to Washis in an airplane much faster thmngmuy of the electoral college.” He has flown across the continent and back seven times. He flew to Pendleton, Oreg, to participate in the famed Western round-up and recently went to San Francisco by plane to ap- pear before the Supreme Court, re- turning to his home at Los Angeles the same day. It is not unusual in the McAdoo routine for him to take a friends by air to Agua Caliente, an hour at luncheon at the Mexican resort and return home, all in three hours. Interested in Sports. He finds his recreation in golf, rid- ing, fishing, n-tmmlnth and . His social activities with Mrs, M the former Eleanor Wilson, of Woodrow Wilson, claim a of his time. He is a 5 HH s personal digious, large enough to time of an average man if nothing else to do, and senior partner of a firm yet he is findidg time memoirs. He has a rare sense his best stories have William Adoo es the victim. With many chuckles he relates an experience in nfi: 'hnllcthe Federal reserve was a live topic. Traveling from Wi to New York, he ob- served & man in front of him reading & front page story in a New York news- of Secretary per. the of *h~ Treasury in the headlines. L_.Jenly the reader turned. !e';?id you ‘uvg see such a fool h:l this etary of e Treasury we" ‘Washingtcn?” he asked. b Agreed With Critic. “No, T never did,” was the McAdoo reply. “I happen to know him quite ml{."md you have him nn?w The two then started & conversation, and finally the stranger handed Mec- Adoo his card with a request for his Dame. “Certainly, ‘'my name is McAdoo. I am the unfortunate Secretary of the i i -3 s_ Q’ ) FE & for a moment feel un- comfortable. I like a good joki self, and I can't tell you how mueh I have enjoyed this one. Don't take back 1 said as you did, and even Iama States I will vote for you.” e 4, t Gambia stam and 13 pm.; high tide, 9:48 a.m. and 10:20 pm. Tomorrow—Low tide, 4:42 a.m. and 5:44 pm; high tide, 10:35 am. and | 11:09 pm! The Sun and Moon. | Today—Sun rose 4:52 am.; sun sets 7:17 pm | Tomorrow—8Sun rises 4:51 am.; sun sets 7:18 pm | Moon rises 6:49 a.m.; sets 10:51 pm. | Automoblle lamps to be lighted one-| haif hour after sunset. Rainfall Comparative figures of the monthly | rainfall in the Capital for the first five | months agaihst the dverage are shown ! in the following table Average. January ..3.55 ins. January . Pebruary..3.27 ins. Pebruary. . March . 1931 156 ins .3.50 ins. April ....2.89 ins. May ..... 153 ins. rainfall for the first five January, 1882, 7.09 inches; February, 1884, 634 inches; March, 1891, 884 inches: April, 1889, 9.13 inches: "May, 1889, 10.69 inches. Weather in Various Cities, Btations. Alpazy. Atlanta, Gs Atlantic City itimore. Md Cle: Pt cloudy dianapolis.In: Jacksonville Fls. 30 02 Foegy Ptcloudy C Cloudy City 29.98 n |Antopio. .~ 2388 8 [Diego. Calif 29.88 (1 a.m. Greenwich time, today.) Temperature. Weather 4 Clouay loudy varc cloudy Clear 1.36 ins.| or not and once inside they may oCCUPY | Wietcher Preston, and two brothers. | PO | Col. John P. Preston, United States| Plan Avoids Interruption. ‘M‘;‘n‘}'v lrl|d Logan Preston, This system was adopted as most fair neral services will be conducted at | to the greatest mummber ot "persons. | the Tesidence at Ruxton, Md., tomorrow | When the reserve seats were held in- morning at 11:30 o'clock, and burial | definitely. pereons arriving 1ate aqmoyed | ¥il be in Arlington National Cemetery, | the contestants. Furthermore, the de- mand for tickets always is greater than the capacity of the available audi- toriums, so that thousands of really in- | terested persons would be prevented | | | with full military honor oo/t $100,000 DAMAGES from hearing the contest if they were | s unable to obtain tickets and knew of | ET FOR Bow STORY no possibility of getting into the hall Under the system in force last year | and this year every seat in the audi- | “It"” Gi i et Fllad oy dne e T e o Sy It 9"] il | uaelf in opened. ko that there is no in- Action Against Publisher | terruption to the speakers. The contest Saturday wil not be for Use of Name. broadeast. but the winner will speak e over a National Broadcasting Co. net- work from this city from 830 (o .40 | 2y e Ateclated Frews. o'clock Sunday morning. Mr. Leigh will | p 2O ANGELES, May 2. Daisy 1. De introduce the national champion for the | Boy aorme: M iar) yiooirs Bow, Faitio etk | actress, filed suit yesterday against | Frederick H. Girnau, weekly new r . e | publisher, asking damages of n‘&: 09 LABOR CUT ‘ACCEPTED |for the alleged use of her name in a | series of articles rurponln( to reveal 5 2 |Incidents in the life of Miss Bow. HOUSTON, Tex, May 20 () —The cation of the articles resulted in end of the walkout of skilled workmen | the arrest of Girmau by Federal au- in Houston building trades was seen |thorities on charges of sending obscene | vesterday when the union men compro. | matter through the mails. Girnau is mised_with Contractor Don Hall, the |8vAiting trial most important employer involved, on | In the suit, Miss De Boe alleged that a cut in wages of $1 per day |the “statements, insinuations and i Two hundred and fifty or more men Buendoes contained in the * left their posts May 1 in protest against | ratives about and concerning the afor: the $2 per day reduction inaugurated |mentioned Clara Bow were and ai the Associated General Contractors. | Wholly and grossly false and untrue.” The new scale, under the compromise, | The piaintiff claimed Girnau pub- will be Bricklayers, $13 per day; |lished the stories upon false representa- carpenters, $9. cement finishers, $10; | tions that they were instigated and au- lathers, $12; hoisting engineers, § thorised by he: The terms of Morris Plan Loans are simple and prac- tical—it is not necessary to have had an account at this Bank to borrow. | fi For each $60 bor- rowed you agree to deposit 35 a month in an ac- count, the pro- ceeds of which may be used to Loans are pass- ed within a day or two after filing .ft l;ear oc:;- wi few ex - tions. Easy to Pay Monthly Ao B M $120 $180 Terior, e R st L pin- | sclentists are inscribed on stone tablets ished’ the “district soanelly’ set up | unveiled yesterday at the Pennsylvania | under the national peasant regime and | College for Women here. The tablets substituted for them prefects directly ’ Tesponsible 1o the present vemmen!."n above the entrance to the new It is 80 obviously almost hopeless for | Louise C. Buhl Hall of Science. the national peasants, who in the last| The list of 28 was chosen in a poll elections carried five-sixths of the| of 902 of the starred scientists listed country, to win the present elections— |in ' American Men of Science. The on account of gerrymandering and oth- | names: er tactics by the government—that| Dr. David Starr Jordan, Dr. Henry there is some talk of a complete boy- | Falr born, Dr. Thomas Hunt cott. M . Edmund Bucher Wilson, If the present methods cofftinue, the | D Dr. E. G government is bound to win. This is| Dr. F. R. King Carol's intention, so that his|Dr. W. M present personal government will be| Dr. C. B. Davenport, Dr. L. H. Baile: perpetuated under a _parliamentary | Dr. C. E. McClung, Dr. R. A. Millikai facade, probably with Mr. Argetolano | Prof. A. A. McHelson, Dr. A, H. as premier. The elections occur June 1, | ton, Prof. K. T. Compton, Dr. (Copyrisht, 1981 | Bridgman, Prof. R. W. Wood, Dr . . | D. Bancroft, Dr. C. N. Lewis, Dr. Irving | Langmuir, Dr. Moses Gomberg, Dr. A. Plans for an airplane service connect- | A. Noyes, Dr. Edward Curtis Franklin, ing North China with Europe, by way | Dr. W. R. Whitney, Dr. G E. Gale of Siberia, have been made. and Dr. Willlam W. Campbell The Tailored Fi fty From our Stein-Bloch Tailors come these magnificent Tailored Fifty Suits. They are fashioned according to Williard Shop speci- fications along cosmopolitan and individual lines. Not elsewhere, we believe, may so much be had for so very little. : Fifty Dollars cancel the note when due. Depos- its may be made onaweekly, semi- monthly or monthly basis as you prefer. $240 $300 $360 $540 $6,000 MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H Street N. W., Washington, D. C. "Chqunr and Earning Power Are the Basis of Credit] MORRIS PLAN to 12 months. Others from $35 to §75 Stein-Bloch Clothes are sold exclusively in Washington at The Williard Shop STONELEIGH COURT 1031-1033 CONNECTICUT AVENUE CLOTHIERS.FUR NISHERS.HATTERS HURSDAY and FRIDAY at 3P Free DEMONSTRATIONS of Refrigerator Recipes Here is an opportunity to see delicious frozen desserts and cooling drinks prepared. Attend these demonstrations to be held in the P. E. P. Co. Audi~ torium in conjunction with the All-Electric Re- fri| rator Show. You'll be interested in the many new and novel ways to make better use of your electric refrigerator. Demonstrations will be under the personal supervision of MISS MARY TURNER Director, Home Service Bureau, Potomac Electrie Pewer Co. at the ALL-ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR SHOW P. E. P. Co. Bwe. 10th_and E Sts. N. W. Spoul}ud by the tric League e - of Washington VALUABLE PRIZE§ AWARDED DAILY ; bt # o