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BEB,E——:ECEIBEGE A—16 » TEAAS MAY SHELVE| LONE COTTON LAN House Committeé Reports| Alternative Bill to Cut Acreage. Wins Scholarship CAPITAL GIRL TO STUDY AT MILLS COLLEGE. Declares By the Associated Press. | AUSTIN, Tex., September 11.—A spe- | cial House Committee of the Texas Leg- | islature, charged with drafting a cotton acrcage control bill, prepared a report today recommending adoption of the | Olcen bill to restrict acreage in 1932 | and 1933 to one-third the cultivated | arca. i The preliminary draft of the report | recommended that all other control bills, including the plan of Gov. Huey P. Long of Louisiana to prohibit all | planting next vear, be laid on the table, | The committee expected to make its| report within a few hours. Plans Substitute Motion. Representative Victor Gilbert of Cisco said he would make a motion on the the conference stage. chairman, James C. is not participating warife” House. | | The MISS FELISA JENKINS, oo 1901 Lawrence street northeast, honor | - floor of the House to substitute the | .,quate of University of Maryland last Long plan. I ople of this State want the | June, Wil enter Mills College, near Oak- 5 ! Calif.,, this month by virtue of & Long plan and nothing short of it |land. Calif, Gilbert stated. “May be this Legislature | scholarship won B‘“S hg;"’ . “"t“;’dm“:& does mot know that, but theyll soon|She was given a B. S. degree al Mary- find it out. dn' it 1s pn;sch by the | land. Legislature and vetoed by the Governor, | == "o e eaibiiity 2 o his shoulders.” | hundred dollars to every million you An effort also will be made to reduce the acreage clause of the Olsen bill to 25 per cent of the cultivated area m’ | ave. “And I'll make another proposition. It you do pass the law, and the price isn’t double today's opening in 30 days and tripled in 60 days I'll pay the same amount.” the next, two years, legislators said. The Senate Agricultural Committee continued its hearings today on the sev- eral bills Introduced in- the Upper |, 00k, Sterling retused to comment a3 House. Advocates of cotton acreage | 1o, What his Beton ROul be 0, limitation in the Senate have agreed on | program. ‘The Governor prepared a a Dill similar to the Olsen bill in the megsage for the Legislature yesterday, Sentiment Seen Shifting. e aen - and W L eon e Cotton men agreed that pressure from | ————— Southern States for the adoption of the | A~~~ e~~~ | 0ld English Boxwood} “no 1932 cotton” plan, as sponsored by IOC ll'ld15c each | Gov. Huey P. Long of Louisiana, and an Lovers of Old English l increasing approval of it on the part of Texas farmers were creating a shift of legislative sentiment. | The extent of the change could not Boxwood will enjoy select- § | ing from our hundreds of 3| thousands of TRUE ¢ DWARF BOX (Suffruti- §| he accurately gauged, but it was be- | cosa). licved to be more pronounced in the House than in the Senate. Gov. Long continued a radio appeal | to Texas farmers to fight for the 1932 | We're the largest growers of boxwood in the world— { | Hi and boxwood was never sold at such prices before. cotton holiday plan as the only one capable of checking their present Visit our Nurseries just this side of Annapolis. economic plunge. Weary from his campaign for adoption of the plan, | Gov. Long spoke from his bed room. | The Louisiana Governor hurled a challenge at Gov. Ross S. Sterling of Texas in the form of a wager. Hurls Wager Challenge. “If your Legislature.” he said. “doesn't | pass the cotton prohibition plan out and out, and f in one week the price B of cotton doesn't drop more than 2|{ Appe Arul cents, I'll pay $1,000 to any charity in| ne 3 ndel Nurseries Texas vou name. Il do this in spite| § Annapolis Md. ng a man who probably has al F vou want quality merchandise—and you want to buy that merchan- I dise in the most convenient possible way—and you want to buy it with real economy—then make a daily habit of stopping at Park and Shop Stores. This shopping community is on Connecticut Avenue at Ordway and Porter Streets. You'll find quality merchandise there, because the merchants whe operate these stores handle fine products. You'll appreciate the con- venience of shopping there, because there is always a parking space for your car, and during the crowded hours a uniformed attendant directs the parking to avoid congestion. The variety of merchandise WHITTLESEY’S FRE Brighten Your Windows With Newly Laundered Curtains Let Us Restore Them to Their Original Spotless Charm . Call CLEVELAND 0722 “SUPERIOR SERVICE” FRAZEE-POTOMAC LAUNDRY == lole——=2lo]e——= ol — ———=|n[——=]0[c——|n[c——=[a[c—=0]§ We're Only the Best in Food Stores There are very few things that are perfect, but milk from your own cow, eggs from your own chickens, and fresh fruit and vegetables out of your own garden, come pretty close to perfection. Most of us can't grow our own and there's where the A&P comes in. A&P Foods come as close to farm freshness as possible. For A&P buys fresh food direct from the growers, rushes it to A&P Food Stores, making them the source of the finest foods next to growing your own, THE EVENING FARM BOARD OUT OF COTTON PARLEYS Hoover’s Plans for Relie Made Without Help, The Farm Board was out of the pic- | ture today as the President’s plans for | helping the cotton industry went into | looking toward some form of banking credit for exporting the staple. This was the central theme of dis- | cussions at the White House between | the President, Eugene Meyer, governor | of the Federal Reserve Board, and W. L. Clayton, Texas cotton factor. | Stone said, however, there was mo | between the board and White | “There is nothing to published reports about differences,” he said. board chairman said he felt| proposals for acreage reductio > of Electric - WorkDone 3 Promptly E | | famous Swanee Syn- copators. of being a_man who probably hes & | vt | LS (] W e—— e[ —la[——a[—— el o} ECONfOMY MONEY . TIME . EFFORT To all of our customers a Household Thermometer. It is neat, small, white enamel on metal and very useful. This thermometer is yours for the asking and of course we want you to use our store for all your Drug Store Needs. Always Phone Cleveland 7777 for Fast Delivery Service! Peoples Hardware Stores Cleveland 9892 Everything in Hardware and Paints PARK and SHOP STORES &=v: EEE—EHEEE_EEEEEEEEE STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, T | ing that by Gov. Long of Touislana for | menting upon such reports, had chal- no planting next year, were up to the | lenged the board to disclose where its States. i wheat was stored. The board's proposal that cotton| Stone said some of it was stored farmers plow under every third row of | with millers, but they were under con- this year's crop was rejected by the| tract to deliver it when called upon. South. He added that one miller who used Stone yesterday defended stabiliza- | more than 100,000 bushels of the grain g:n"ggea':fn&kmt ‘:"{'m commodities. | had been forced to pay for it at a price a off ‘the market st critical times' had | "PPrOXImating 86 cenis & bushel probably saved farmers millions of dollars. “These must be taken into account,” | | he sald, “in any final estimate of the | board’s stabilization operations.” Juvenile Court Founder Dies. SEATTLE, September 11 P —King Dykeman, 57, who concelved and cres,| The board chairman said reports | ated the first individual Juvenile Court | that stabilization wheat | | “loaned” to milling companies, to be | died yesterday. Judge Dykeman was a | replaced with new wheat at cheap | newspaper publisher here for three prices was “absolutely untrue.” Gov. Stone. was being | in the United States here 26 years ago, | years aftet resigning from the Superior Murray of Oklahoma, com- bench in 1925. A Great 2-Day Sale According to the | Stone, the board | in arrangements | includ- Just in time for Fall planting, we offer these fine root pruned evergreens, at prices nothing short of sen: All trees dug with Ball of Earth. Come out and make your own choice. | V No phone or C. O. D. orders. Free delivery. Two Outstanding Price Groups ! Group No. 1 Reularly Now 1 3—4 ft. Virginia Juniper. . 1 2—3 ft. Irish Juniper. ... 12 ft. Retinospora Veitch 12 ft. Plumosa Aurea.. 12 ft. Norway Spruce i 1 18 in. Globe Arbor Vitae.. 1.75 6 Trees—I ea., sale, $9; 12 Trees—2 ea., sale, $16 Group No. 2 om, Regularly Fach 1 3—4 ft. Pyramidal Arbor Vitae....$5.00 $3.00 | | 1 3—4 ft. Retinospora Plumosa Aurea. 5.00 3.00 12 ft. Retinospora Veitch ceses 31000 LT5 1 2—3 ft. Irish Juniper. ... 3.00 175 1 18—24 in. Biota Nana Aurea. . 4.00 2.50 1 18—24 in. Globe Arbor Vitae. .. 3.00 2.00 6 Trees—1 ea., sale, $12.50; 12 Trees—2 ea., sale, $22.50 On Sale Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 12 and 13 Only FLORIST 9L 4000 Balto. Boulevard Cottage City Nursery SEPTEMBER and sersices which these stores offer make it possible for you to satisfy every ordinary shopping need with one stop. Shopping at this group of stores is trye economy of MONEY, TIME and EFFORT. because in addition to the quality of the merchandise and the wide range of services. plus the convenience with which they may be secured, the PRICES at which they are offered give added surdhasinghpower 'to your shopping/dotlar. Why not economize the easiest way by doing your shopping at PARK and SHOP STORES? DRUG STORE 1 BREAD!—BREAD!—BREAD! Salt Rising Genuine Gluten Walnut Raisin Lima Bean and Rolls in Endless Variety! BARKER Original BAKERY 616 ath St. N.W. 1408 New York Ave. 3517 Conn. Ave. 3128 14th St. N.W. VERY WOMAN enjoys going through these aisles, stopping here and there to pick from orderly shelves just the brand that she wants. She has, too, the added privilege of carefully ex- amining any new product that may have been put on the market—reading the label or instructions on the pack- age and deciding for herself whether or not to try it. PIGGLY WIGGLY “Where You Shop at Leisure and Choose as You Go” ( Connecticut Ave. at | | | fi | | l | | | | fl it THE AVENUE AT SEVENTH ADVANCE SELLING FALL 31 TWO-TROUSER SUITS at a low price N advance special selling of A our brilliantly new FALL clothes from our regular mak- ers; suits that will be great values at higher prices after this special offering. The very newest Fall Twist and Worsted fabrices are represented—every suit is cut over a new Fall model—and every shade distinctively belongs to the coming season! Every suit beautifully lustrous lined— guaranteed for service. Every pattern an example of good taste. Among the new shades are Hazel- nut Brown, Bastille Gray. Franco impossible later Blue, Blue-Gray. Oxford. 33 = Head for the ‘““Speedway’! Fall’s Snap Brim Hat "That Has ‘Everything’ . IT has a smarter snap. and it HOLDS it! A medium-weight hat to put on NOW and KEEP on! It has the full bell-shape crown with small brim that rolls at the back—and the smart long bow. Hand-flanged for permanent style. New shades — Iris, Ostrich, Dove, Pelican, Nougat. Cordovan, Copper. 'And See the Suede Felt at $6.50! Saks Third Floor First Floor Pagi ing the Smart Prepster for Fall! New Styles . . . New Values . . . In Suits With Two Trousers $187 OR the Prepster (and smart young fellows in general) we have a great clothing value here for Fall. You will see higher price written all over it—in the fine woolens, the superior styling and every detail from well fit- ting collars to the beautiful, lustrous quarter lining. Striking Shetland Hopsak and Herringbone Weaves— in new Browns, Tans, as well as Blue, Blue Grey and Oxford. Chest meas- urements, 31 to 36. Saks—Sacond Floor