Evening Star Newspaper, July 21, 1931, Page 6

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THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh Expensive Furniture on the Bargair Table! | THE EVENING OBLESS PROBLEM EASY FOR IRELAND Free State Report Shows Little Suffering From Unemployment. BY FRANCIS M. MANSFIELD. By Cable to The Star. GENEVA, July 21.—Robert C. Fer- gusson, assistant secretary of the De- partment of Industry and Commerce of the Irish Free State, has sent a report here that his country has not suffered from any great degree of unemploy- ment: at Jeast, not to anything like the extent of other countries. Farmers Not Suffering. Continuing, in a report made to the International Labor Conference, which held its fifteenth Geneva this agricultural production does not show any decrease in quently no marked decrease in the em- ployment of agricultural labor. The principal exports from Ireland are live stock and animal food products —also Ford tractors from Cork. teen thirty export figures show no de- crease as compared with recent years. The fall in_export prices has not been greatly marked. No difficulty has been experienced by selling all his cattle and cattle products at prices which, in view of the prevail- ing agricultural depression, cannot be regarded as unsatisfactory there may he was virtually made up by a sharper drop in the prices of imported fertil food stuffs. session in that annual month, he states output and conse- Nine- the Irish farmer in Any drop e been in export price s and Aided by Government. The easy situation of the Irish farmer is due to the fact that Ireland is mot & country principaily producing grain and such other commodities as have suffered the sharpest fall in price: ‘Government greatly in Legislation has brought about rationali- | zation of certain parts of the agricul- tural industry, particularly in the mat- ter of standardizing qualities. of combined marketing are being worked out. established by the state supplies tal to farmers. and co-operative societies for the pur- chase of farm supplies have been a fea- ture of Irish farm economy for many years. Telieved farmers of a portion of the bur- den of local taxation. s. have aided the situation. policies stabilizing Schemes An agricultural credit corporation api- Co-operative breweries A recent legislative measure has Sales Manager Disappearsy During Night, Possibly for Relief of Asthma. Capital War Veteran’s Wife Has Cities Paged—His Berth Is Found Unused. Claude Harris, 47 years old, of Wash- ington, Edstern sales manager for the ' Van Camp Sea Food Co, who was Te- | ported missing Saturday night from a | Pennsylvania Rallroad train en route | | here from' Buffalo, was sought today | throughout Pennsylvania and Maryland Disappearance of Harris, a gassed World War veteran, who was suffering from acute bronchitis and asthma, was reported to local police yesterday by | —— STAR, WASHINGTON, TWO STATES SEEK MAN GONE FROM TRAIN ON WAY TO D. C. _ CLAUDE HARRIS. | his wife, Mrs. Ethel George Harris of | | Gorcoran | Gourts, 401 - Twenty-third | IMPROVED FLY SPRAY street. Mrs. Harrls, fearing her husband had become temporarily deranged from the severe pregsure of the asthma on his gas-weakeped lungs and had left the | Mixture of Fish ©il, Coal Tar Dip train to seek relief, last night requested long-distance telephone operators to | page police and hospitals in towns along | the railroad line. | “'She said the porter on her husband's |car had tpld her he thought he had | STILLWATER, Okla. DOES NOT HARM MILK| and Laundry Soap Leaves - No Odor. (#)—H. P. seen Harrls last at about 1:30 o'clock | Moffitt, dairy agent with Oklahoma A. | Sunday marning when the train arrived | & M. College, has a fly spray which he in Renova, Pa. When he went to call | 7:40 o'clock, the man was missing, the | © porter said, His berth was unrumpled. | | There arefour stops between Renova |and Baltimore — Lockhaven, Willilams- | port, Sunbury and Harrisburg, Pa. Officials of the Pennsylvania Railroad instructed train police along the line to | | contact local authorities and rende every possible assistance in the search. | Because the train Harrls was on, which | left Buffalo at 9 o'clock Saturday, was | due here ' Sunday morning at oclock, was split at Harrisburg, one | section of cars going on to Philadel- | phia, railroad officials were instituting | a search for Harris in that city. belief he may have been in the wrong | car at the time. Harris was 5 feet 7' inches tall and weighed 170 pounds. He was described as being partly bald and having light hair, blue. eyes and a smooth, ruddy complexion. When he disappeared he was dressed in & gray two-plece, Sum- mer-weight suit, with his name on a tallor's tag in the inner right-hand | Harris_as the train left Baltimore at |52V 8:40 | Hyattsville s, it properly applied will not cause dor in milk The mixture is made of 41 quarts of fish oil, 4 whale ofl | bars enough warm water to make a batcn of 30 gallons. FIRE DELEGATES NAMED | quarts tar dip, 3 quarts 1'; quarts oil of tar and 3 of laundry soap, dissolved in Department Chooses Convention Representatives. in the | Special Dispatch to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md.. July 21 —At & | meeting of the Hyatts | Pire Department last and alternates to the annual conven- tion of the Prince Georg: men’s Association, Augus Marlboro, were elected as follows: Delegates ant Chief Harry Degges, Capt. Dav! ville Volunteer night _delegates County Fire- 8, at Upper Chief Noble Rushe, Assist- ‘Treasurer John J. Fainter an E. Trott. NEW TURKEY SEES Prolific Families of 01d Did Much to Prevent Baby Shortage Now Faced. By the Associated Press. ‘ ISTANBUL.—For the first praise of the sultans is creeping into | the press of republican Turkey—praise | not for their politics nor their persons, {but for their prolific families. | Modern underpopulated Turkey 1is urged to remember Sultan Mourad III, Young | Turkey is showing a tendency mnot to | but that mighty | monarch had 40 wives and 500 oda- | whose children numbered 102, | marry even once, | lisques. | | | of Allah. Then, in his old age. a | dredth son was born to him. the same period of last year. TiredFEET revived instantly The minute you put your sore, burning | feet in & TIZ bath you can just feel the | pain being drawn out and grateful com- fort soaking in. TIZ draws out and poisons that Another Ottoman personage, Alaed- dine Molla, had 99 sons. To each he gave as name one of the 99 attributes | named this last son for the devil. | Soviet Russia exported into England | in March and April chocolate valued at. $31,500, or nearly three times that of make feet tender, | D O, TUESDAY, JULY . 2L | TAXI COMPANY SUED GOOD |N SULTANATE'm-imm Asks $50,000 for Injuries time, hun- He acids | 1931. COMMUNITY GROUPS | 1.1in% 5hs i b, irgte by dore | L. Birney and Miss Lena Barghausen. TO GIVE OPERETTA Tickets are on sale at the Community Center Department. A. A. A. head- quarters, the Willard and Washington hotels and can be procured at the gate. The series of Summer programs is | being presented by Community Center Department and the office of Pu Bulldings and Public Parks with assistarce of the National Capital Fund. P in Collision. ‘The Independent Taxi Owners’ Asso- ciation and Charles B. Chick, 120 Quincy street northeast, & member of the association, were sued jointly yes- terday in the District, Supreme Court by Willlam W. Boulineau, 1628 Nineteenth street, for $50,000 damages for alleged personal injuries. The plaintiff, throuzh Attorney Alvin L. Newmyer, says he was a passenger in Chick’s cab when it was in collision with another automobile at Seventh and T streets April 27 last and sustained serfous injuries. More Than 75 Boys and Girls Prom Neighborhood House to Appear at Sylvan Theater. More than 75 boys and girls made T emon Cake. up ot/ Ne'eE boxiood) s ertDHmIIN | gy gigie: i cuptut of sughsith present & Chinese operetta at 8 o'clock |, & 0 % "Wl Of SUBAT With one Friday night. as the third of & serles | r0 0o oo O Datten, ore tablespoon- Geeidle : of Summer festival programs at the | ©f I three eggs. one cupful of i o|Sylvan Theater. The 13th Engineers 710 nd one teaspoonful of baking The Chilean government is conduct- | Band, which has not been heard in an |Powder. Bake in jelly tins. Put be- ing a campaign for the erection of |outdoor concert here for a number of |tween the layers & fi made of two houses which will rent for not more |years, will supplement the program. | apples and one lemon, grated together than $24 a menth. The operetta entitled “The Feast of with a little sugar i GREATER THE KAUFMAN STORES The Greatest Values in Our History--to Celebrate the Opening of Our New Stores The opening of our new Basement Departments brings a Value-Demon- stration that surpasses any event which we have ever held—every department joining in this store-wide event to give bargains which will be the “talk of the town” for many months. ONVENIENT TERMS No Interest or Extras Added 00000000000 00000 90000000400 00000 Offering Complete Equipment for Your Home URNITURE—FLOOR COVERING—BEDDING - This Beautiful | Charles Alternates—Lieut Alfred Degges. Fire Marshal C. O. Pro tor, Secretary Earle Dorrelle, Lioyd An- | derson_and Laurence Watson. | - achy and sore. Also takes pain_out of | corns, calluses and bunions. Revives | tired feet and makes them sweet, fresh | and comfortable. All druggists. (Copyright, 1931) pocket. POLICEMAN INJURED | BURGLAR LOSES FIGHT BED ROOM SUITE Ernest Lucas of Trafic Bureau Is Intruder Routed by William H. Hurt in Automobile Accident. | Simons From Residence. Policeman Ernest Lucas. 29. attached | Engaging in a hand-to-hand tussle for This Colonial Electric Clock (1) Hammond electric movement. (2) Walnut cabi- net. ' (3) Four shelves. (4) May be used in the living room or hall. (Pourth Floor, The Hecht Co.) July Sale of Furniture THE HECHT CO. F Street at Seventh to the Traffic Bureau, Emergency Hospital early this morn- ing for injuries he received in an auto- mobile accident near Upper Marlboro. Md. After being treated for cuts about the face and | home from the hospital is not serious. hospital in an automobile operated by Pred P. Payne. RCA Victor was ' treated at head the officer went His condition He was brought to the 1615 Swann street SPECIALS —from “Radio Headquarters” When the world’s largest radio factory ... and the world’s foremost group of ra engineers...and the world’s greatest sound ex- erts work together on new nstruments, you can abso- lutely depend on getting RCA Victor Compnny, Inc. + Camden,N. ]J. A Radio Corporation of America Subsidiary . with a colored burglar who had en- tered his home last night, Willlam H Simons, 4801 Thirteenth street, routed the man before he had taken anything. Mr. Simons told police he heard the man moving about downstairs and the two had & rough-and-tumble fight. The burglar fled through the back door and was said to have been joined by another outside wonderful performance... at unbelievably low cost. Hear these three instru- ments at your RCA Victor dealer’s TODAY and learn what marvelous values are now being offered by “Radio Headquarters,” New RCA Victor Superette Smallest BIG Radio Ever Built, a owerful 8-tube Super-Hetero- vne, withnew RCA Super-Control Tubes. Cabinets i , walnut, mahogany or maple. Tone color control . .. only $ l950 Complate with RCA Radistrons —ready to eperate The Console Marvelous sound effects from new “acoustically balanced” cabinet. .. beautiful, durable finish... power- ful 8-tube Super-Heterodyne . . . comparable performance would have cost $166 a year ago...yours 38950 Complate with RCA Radiotrens —ready te operate Nesw Portable Victrola Improved sound box. Sounds like &g phahopraplil Cavtiss 10 wee: ords snugly. One winding lasts for two Vietor 10-inch records. Dur- able waterproof case, red or blue Fabrikoid, only The Foming Star ADVERTISENENT Bhain o f RECEIVED HERE Leave Copy for Star Classified Ads At Any Star Branch Office OOK the list over—you'll find one in your neigh- borhood—and its service may save you a trip downtown to the Main Office. fees in connecfion with St There are no ar Branch Office service— only regular rates are charged. In the N 11th and Park rd.—Arm- strong’s Pharmacy. 14th end P sts.—Day's Pharmacy. 1135 14th st. — Marty's Cigar & Magazine Store. 17th ‘lnd Que sts. — Ken- and U Brock. 2912 14th st.—Colliflower Art & Gift Co. 3401 14th st.— Bronaugh's Pharmacy. 14th and Buchanan sts.— Hohberger’s Pharmacy. 14th st. and Colorado ave. —O’Donnell's Pharmacy. 3209 Mount Pleasant st. Mount Pleasant Cigar and News Shop. 1773 Columbia rd. — The Billy Shop. 2162 California st. — Co- lodny Brothers. Wardman Park Pharmacy. N. Y, N. J. aves. and M st. Sanitary Pharmacy. 1st and K sts.—Duncan’s Pharmacy. (time clerk's Drug Store. 7th st. and R. I ave.—J. French Simpson. 11th and M sts.—L. H. Forster’s Pharmacy. In the Southwest 10th st. and Va. ave. — Herbert's Pharmacy. 316 414 st. — Harris’ Drug Store. 41 and L sts.—Columbia Pharmacy. In the Northeast 208 Mass. ave. — Capitol Towers Pharmacy. 4th and H sts. — Home Drug Store. 907 H st.—Garren's Music Store. 12th and Md. ave.—Luck- ett’s Pharmacy. 7th and Md. ave.— Louis F. Bradley. North Capitol and Eye—Ken- ealy’s Phar- macy. 20th and R. I ave. — Collins’ Pharmacy, ‘Woodridge. 3500 12th st. — Brookland Pharmacy, Brookland. 4th and R. L ave. — John G. Biggs’ Phar- ma Chesapeake Junction — Dr. F. L. Wight, jr. There's One Vorthwest 9th and U Hunton’s Pharmacy Ga. ave. and Upshur st.— Petworth Pharmacy. 221 Upshur st. — Monck’s Pharmacy. 5916 Ga. ave.—Brightwood Pharmacy. Ga. ave. and Kennedy st. —Lampkin’'s Pharmacy. 2901 Sherman ave.—Sher- man Ave. Pharmacy. 6224 3rd st. — Stewart’s Pharmacy. 1905 Mass. ave. — Dupont Pharmacy. 18th and Fla. ave.—Bern- stein’s Drug Store. Fla. ave. and 1st st.—N. Reiskin. North Capitol st. and R. I. ave. — Parker's Phar- macy. 1742 Pa. Louis Krick. 21st and G sts.—Quigley’s Pharmacy. 25th st. and Pa. ave. — Herbst's Pharmacy. 3315 Conn. ave. —Joll’s Newsstand. Wisconsin ave. and Macomb st.—Harry C. Taft. 4231 Wisconsin ave.—Mor- gan Bros.’ Pharmacy. Takoma Park, 359 Cedar st. —Mattingly Bros.’ Phar- macy. sts. — ave. — J. In Georgetown 30th and P sts.—Morgan Bros.” Pharmacy. 30th and M sts.—Brace’s Pharmacy. 3411 M st.—Moskey's Phar- macy. 2072 Wisconsin ave.— Haney's. Wisconsin ave. and O st.— Donahue’s Pharmacy. 35th and O sts.— Sugar’s Drug Store. 5104 Conduit rd. — Modern Drug Store. In the Southeast 3rd and Pa. ave—O'Don- nell’'s Drug Store. 8th and Eye sts. —F. P. Weller's Pharmacy. 11th and Pa. ave. — Fealy’s Pharmacy. 1907 Nichols ave., Anacostia —Healy’s Drug Store. 13th and East Capitol sts. — Lincoin Park Pharmacy. 2204 Minnesota ave. — Sloan’s Drug Store; F. S. Boisfeunil- Near You let, prop. | | | | | over o1 with seasoned intas g . quality furniture, which could easily command a much highe e Living Room Suite Persian mohair, reversible Dinette Suite Walnut veneered, seven- cushions. and deep spring piece set, with extension = seats. Three-piece. beauti- and $ ful _suites—wonderful value at this price. table, china cabinet four ‘chairs, beautifully up- holstered. Regular $1.75 Bridge Lamp and Shade 98¢ When you see them you won't believe the price! Charm- ingly designed bases. and Regular $25 5-Pc. Breakfast Set 81595 Four splendid, stur- dy chairs, and drop- Regular $25 Bed Outfit $12.95 Including a walnut- finish bed, thick cot- ton mattress and dia- Mattress 84.95 ‘Thick, rolled edge; closely tufted; covered mond link spring, in with good quality art lovely, attractive leaf table in choice twin or double size. ticking. All sizes. shades. of green or oak. 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000006 soegeastaiid The New MEN’S WORK CLOTHES Department ¢¢¢eecesces Offering Sensational Values for Opening Sale! 1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000030000060000000. 00000000000000000000000006000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000- 222222222 22222222222 TIE00000000000000000000 Women’s Summer 96000000000000000 9000000000000 00. S Half Price and Less! Ever Offered! 72x90 Sheets l 45¢ Linen Finish $1 Blue Overalls Regular 1214c Hose 220 blue denim with white Perfect, cotton hose in back. Perfect quality triple 65 a varlety of colors. All 17 C sizes to 12. Extra special 72C Cottonade and wash fab- 72x80 natnsook suits, with rics; atrong pockets; good_cut reinforced back. Almost half and make. Sizes 30 to 42. price. Sizes 36 to 46. 39¢ Work Shirts 29¢*Shirts & Shorts Fine quality blue chambray Cotton pull-over shirts and shirts, triple stitched, coat fancy broadcloth shorts. Per- izes 1415 to 17. Si ; $000000000000000000000000000000000:0000000000000000000000066600066000’ #00444000444000« The ENLARGED SHOE Department ¢¢¢eeesssssssses Men’s Goodyear Welt < ~ OXFORDS FOOTWEARg Choice of black and tan in these i rice. $1.%5 | $ 61011 — = in the Lot 000000000000000000000000000000000:0000000000000000006000000000000008 Daring Value! $5 to $6.95 Values Silk 14 to 50 A variety of graceful, smart frocks, formerly priced at s much higher figure, is now offered you at this low cost. Sport frocks and street. dresses, party dresses, and stitched; with bib. Sizes 32 to 44. price on these. 79¢ 29¢ style. Two large pockets. fect quality; good make. o ‘The most $3.88 Jacket dresses, to flll your every $1 Work Pants 50¢ Union Suits 39¢ 9 s zes 30 to 44 ]' C remarkabis fine shoes, at a = .lr?Yllbl’ reduced Sizes AIL Sizes Sizes need. 81x90 Sheets 55¢ Linen Finish At these savings these famously #ood, long wear- ing sheets d cases are posi- tively phenomenal in price. Every Wash ington housewife should inspeet the “Green % sheets. well known for their honest value and endur- 81x105 Sheets 75¢ Linkn Finish 81x99 Sheets 65¢ Linen Finish Sale $1 and $1.98 0dd Lots and Samples of Corsettes and Girdles $2 Large Brim Rough Straws and 45x36 Linen-Finish Panamas PILLOWCASES. .. Large, attractive . rTou 42x26 Match Sheets PILLOWCASES... ing service. fore the They’ll find it the aquality. ‘and st bargaln now they're they've ever seen., even less.

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