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Linger’s 2. ek ‘THE BEDSPRING LUXURIOUS FOR YOUR SUMMER ' HOME OR CAMP sses, Cots, Double-Deck Beds We Make This a Special Feature Our Business 925 G St. N.W. Natl. 4711, JELLIES AND JAMS MADE AT HOME ARE GOOD INVESTMENT Mattresses Remade Every housewife has the chance to “get ahead” next winter by put- ting up fruit now. Sugar is low in price, and there are always bar- gain days for each fruit and berry. | Alittle concentrated effort as each fruit crop reaches its peak will re- sult in a cupboard well stocked with canned fruits, jellies, jams and relishes from which one may draw freely throughout the winter. Since fruit belongs in the diet and should appear in some form at every meal, the economy of a home supply is readily apparent. Cane sugar is ideal for all kinds of can- ning. Preserve with refined cane sugar. The Sugar Institute. When FEET hurt reliefin30seconds Poor, sore,” swollen feet—burning and 2ching all day! them in a TIZ bath you can just feel glorious comfort soaking in as all the | ache is drawn out. TIZ draws out the acids and polsons that cause feet to swell, burn and smell. Takes the sting out of corns, calluses and bunions, too. ‘To enjoy sweet, fresh, ‘comfortable feet | get a package of TIZ from any druggist. | Sports ; ‘ Ensemble ‘ —is one of the out- | standing smart fea- | tures of the season. | Shetland Sports Coats —in the new tans, browns and grays— single and dn uble breasted. To be worn with '| White or Striped Flannel or Serge Trousers $8.75 Both the Coat and Trousers are consid- erably below last Summer’s prices. comfort and superior v material and making. Pongee shirts; nat- ural color;attached collar. $195 The minute you put | Imported Belgian Linen Suits They are immensely popular—for their dressy Single and § 75 double breasted -vueviesencncernrs 13 Two Specials in Haberdashery Both are at revised prices The Mode—F -at Eleventh ATTORNEY SEVENT POTOMAG VICTIM Edward C. Sasnett Drowns While Swimming Near Key Bridge. The treacherous waters of the upper | Potomac clalmed their seventh vietim | of the year when Edward C. Sasnett, 51-year-old patent attorney, of 1892 Ontarip" place drowned late yes- terday . afternoon while swimming off Dempsey’s Boat [ House, near Key Bridge. Sasnett, an ac- complished swim- mer and _canoeist, [§ sank beneath the surface while frol- licking in the water about 50 feet from the boat house float, apparently | the victim of & | heart attack. The body was recovered | by "firemen and police 25 minutes | Iater. Edward C. Basnett. Walting for Friends. ‘The attorney was waiting &t the boat house for a party of friends when he decided ufon his ill-fated swim, po- lice were C. W. Cook of the United -States Geological Survey saw Sasnett go under and shouted an alarm. W. J. -Stevenson of 1324 Thirteenth street dived several times, but was un- able to find Sasnett in the deep water. Members of the fire rescue squad and located the body in 18 feet of water, with the aid of grappling hooks, 25 | minutes after they were summoned to the scene by a telephone alarm. Revival Efforts Fail. Rescue squad workers applied artifi- | cial respiration for nearly an hour in | futile effort to revive the man.. He |was pronounced dead by Dr. A. S. Grossberg of the Casualty Hospital |staff. The body was removed to the &L;ltrlcl Morgue in the harbor patrol Dr. Josepn D. Rogers, deputy cor. oner, issued a certificate of accidental death after completing his investiga- tion today. The attorney, Who had offices in the | McGIl Building, is survived by his | widow, Mrs. Beatrice Sasnett, and two | sons, Edward Canning Sasnett, 18, and ‘John Kramer Sasnett, 16. The latter graduated at Central High School a | week ago. | Sasnett was a graduate of Emory { University and the Georgetown Univer- | sity Law School, where he received his | law degree. He had resided in the Cap- | ital for the past ZB years. <WOMAN CRIME FIGHTER | MADE POLICE OFFICIAL | Miss Henrietta Additon Raised to Deputy Commissioner of Gotham Police. By the Associated Press, NEW YORK. June 23.—Miss Henri- etta Additon, who for a year has been ‘head of New York's Crime Prevention Bureau, vesterday stepped into the role | of deputy police commissioner and a |salary of $8,000 a year, | Miss Additon, a former Philadelphian, |1s the first woman to hold such office | in New York. She ranks ixth in the | list of deputies aiding Commissioner Edward P. Mulrooney. Her previous position earried a salary of $6,000. She has been directing a staff of 140 men and 60 women in an effort to strike at the roots of crime by straight- ening out the maladjustments of boys and girls from 12 to 21 years old, espe- cially in Manhattan’s teeming tenements. Her previous experiences included four years in the Philadelphia Munici- pal Courts and five in the War Depart- ment at Washington, ; alue — both Pongee Pajamas; new convertible collar. police of the harbor precinct station | THE EVENING | RAT MORALE IS DUE TO WAVER WHEN ‘18 YOUNG KILLERS ARRIVE Studenn. Victors in Rodent Exterminating Contest, Are Coming to Capital Battlefront Tomorrow. Eighteen youthful exponents of the catch-as-catch-can method of rat ex- termination who will roll into town to- morrow from Butler County, Pa., are expected to throw consternation into the ranks of Washington's own rodent colony in the old Center Market area. The amateur Pled Pipers, winners of a rat-annihilation contest sponsored amorg high school students by a Butler County, Pa., bank, are credited with having “put on the spot” many thou- sands of rats that had overrun barns, houses and other_buil 3 R. C. Wiggins, Butler County agricul- tural adviser, wjll lead the touring group on a sightseeing trip here. The youths are expected to show keen in- terest in the scene of the Government's rat campaign in the old market section. ‘The students, who will come here by bus, will return to their homes late to- morrow by way of Baltimore and Gettys- burg. UNDERGROUND GARAGE CONTRACT AWARDED Dayton; Ohio, Company Gets Job to Construct Terrace and Fountain at Capitol. rage in the new portion of the Capitol Grounds has been awarded to the H. R. Blagg Co. of Dayton, Ohio, it was an- nounced today by David Lynn, architect of the Capitol. The work will cost $772,000. The underground garage will be just west of the Senate Office Building in the square be ween Delaware a: New Jersey avenue:, The fountain and ter- race will b2 above it, and will be one of the attractive features of the park- STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, 2600 EMPLOYED ONU. . BUILDINGS Six More Scheduled for Year. | More than 2,600 men now are em- | ployed in Washington on new govern- mental building projects. ‘This was disclosed today by an in- formal survey, which also indicated that during the Summer six more huge buildings will be started to help further relieve unemployment. Most of the labor being used on the | blg Government projects here is local labor, and under a recent law it is being paid according to the prevailing wage scale. With the beginning of construction this Summer of the.six more large A contract to bulld an ornamental | yay being laid out between the Capitol | buildings. downtown, however, it is an- terrace, fountaln and underground ga- |and Union Station. ticipated the number of men employed Federal Ten Projects in 'Progress, | JUNE 23, will rise rapidly. The ways is reached ment on any Fok 1ob a e&uldlnfly hl: beenl well st 'k nummbcr ol;\‘vflfll;‘x m or a larger Archives Bullding Next. Within a few days the Government expects to inaugurate what will be known as the second big phase of the bullding program in downtown the new Mémom su:mn:' the ;{: on of old Center Market. ‘The m.her new structures to go under downtown this Summer will be_the Deputme it of Justice, be- tween Ninth and Tenth streets, Penn- sylvania and Constitution avenues; the new Post Office Department Building between Twelfth and Thirteenth, C street and Pennsylvania avenue, and three buildings tied together in one long com- posite group between Twelft'. street and Pourteenth street for the Interstate Commerce Commission, a Government nn%lowrlum and the Department of Among the bulldings now under con- struction downtown, the largest number of workmen are employed on the De- partment of Commerce, where 600 mea are busy. They include plasterers, painters, marble sctters, bronze workers, ornamental iron workers, electricians, elevator men and others, 430 Men Work on Annex. On the new Department of Agricul- ture Building extension covering 1931. of employ- city block between B and C southwest, adjacent to the Demnmmt' administrative building, there are em- | to ployed about 430 men. = Fifty men are working on the Arling- ton Memorial Bridge, 50 men are wreck- ing the old Potomac Electric Power Co. | substation ta Fourteenth street and Constitution avenue, site for the De- | partment of Labor, and 120 men are | wrecking the site of the new Depart- | ment of Justice between Ninth and ‘Tenth streets, Pennsylvmin and Consti- | tution avenues. 1,400 Work on Hill. A total of about 1,400 men is em—[ ployed on various building projects on | Capitol Hill, according to the office of | the architect of the Capitol. These projects include the new House Office Bullding, remodeling of the old Senate | Office Building, the new Supreme Court | Building and some others, E ‘Workmen ere busy completing an ad- | dition to Mount Alio Hospital on Wis- | consin avenue. Other public projects.are pending in various parts of the city. Contract is| held up over a new tuberculosis ward for St. Elizabeth’s Hospital,” but work |* is expected to get under way this Summer. Construction work also is proceeding across the Potomac River on the new entrance to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington, and the approach, leading from the Virginia end of the | Arlington Memorial Bridge. ' More than 21,000 blind listeners in England have been given free licenses own_radio receiving_ sets. Your Dinner Tomghl —or Order a Ca:e From One of the Fol- lowing Distributors Charles Fleischran, Acent, Phone H)-lhvllle V4o, ‘holesaie Lin, n. 1418, Whistle Bottling Ce.. Al 1214, The Geo. Gunther, Jr., Brewing Co | Baltimore, Md. Phone Wolfe 005¢ NNLOAUNTL CLIT [ NEW PACKARD CARS The new Continental models of the Packard Eight are now on display at our showrooms. You are cordially invited to examine them. Old only in distinguished name, in adberence to the simplest principles of motor design, and in refusal to give up the characteristic beauty of line that has long spelled “Packard”, the new Packards are new in every- thing else. Longer in wheelbase, wider in tread and with new frames! Such foundation changes make newness a necessity throughout. Bodies have been redesigned for greater beauty, strength and luxury. They are now most thoroughly in- sulated against heat, cold and noise. Freshly upholstered and trimmed, with new pillow-top cushions, their interior loveliness will appeal to all. The new Vee radiator provides an identifying mark of smartness. The new bonnet houses a more powerful motor, floated in rubber, and one that only purrs in its quietness. Out of the richest experience in the in- dustry, Packard continues to pre- sent the simplicity and economy of eight-in-line design and in doing this challenges any other type on any score. Outstanding among the many new featuresis Ride Control—shock absor- bers adjustable from the dash to meet any road, speed, load or temper- ature condition. Now, instantly, you can have just the kind of ride you like ew wn pa)?%rma/wa . &éw' w /uury_. best. At last, true luxury in motor- ing! Ride Control, the newest and most appreciated thing in motoring, is to be had only in Packard cars. You will appreciate the four-speed synchro-mesh transmission as Pack- ard builds it. You will marvel at the action of the Stabilizers built into the bumpers of the larger cars. You will enjoy, and we mean this most literally, the exploration of the new Packard for its many new features. Again, come and see the new cars. Ride in them and drive them your- self and then compare them with all other cars. In spending your motor- ing dollar when dollars mean more, why not have the car of tomorrow instead of any car of yesterday? Next Monday night, June 29th, Packard will present Jor the first time on the air GERALDINE FARRAR, fa- mous Metropolitan soprano, beginning a series of Monday evening radio recitals in honor of its new cars. The Packard Eight is offered in thirteen beautiful body styles — the Packard Eight DeLuxe in twelve. Prices at the factory range Jrom $2485 for the Packard Eight FivesPassenger Sedan te $4550 for the Packard Eight DeLuxe Convertible Sedan for five. T H E M A Packard-Washington Motor Connecticut at S Open Evenings Until 10 P.M. This Week Only- Car Co. O. COOLICAN, President. ADams 6130