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0 « BORAH SEES SILVER WORLD TRADE HOPE Senator Lays - Extensive Business llls to Mone- tary Deflation. By the Assoctated Press. BIOUX CITY, Iowa, September 20.— A return of world-wide prosperity, in the e opinion of Senator Wil- lam E. is dependent in part upon restoration of silver as the world’s monetary standard. A reduction of armaments and repa- pations, revision of the Versailles peace treaty and elimination of Government bureaus, which, he said, tended to “destroy the character of American business,” also were outlined by him as necessary steps before prosperity could be restored. Sees Market Bars. Deflated monetary values have closed 40 the American farmer great markets in the East and demonetization of silver has reduced nearly 75 per cent the pur- chasing power of more than one-half the human race, he assérted here last night. ‘Outlining his program for prosperity, the Idaho Senator turned to agriculture. “We are just as far from the solution of the farm problem as we were in 1928," he avowed. He saw the deben- ture as “one of rt‘}:e euel;‘tlll (u’cu;rs iri restoring: erity to the agricultural areas,” bmunud either the de- benture, the equalization plan or any other plan as a remedy that “alone will aid the cause.” Wider Protection Asked. Protective tarifis should be extended | to farm regions as well as to those of industry, he maintained. Were it not for tariff “favors,” the New England States “would be nothing more than a bleak and barren waste at the present time,” he declared. Senator Borah foresaw in reduced a “wave of fear over the working man,” which he said would “paralyze | R his purchasing power.” —_— Priest Curb Is Extended. MEXICO CITY, September 29 (#).— | A dispatch to the newspaper Excelsior from Tampico, State of Tamaulipas, sajd the government announced yester- day that hereafter only 12 Catholic priests will be allowed to perform their clerical duties in that State.. JTHE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON,- D. C. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1931 Park Service War Dooms Killers of Trumpeter Swans Aims to Save Greatest of American Water Fowl " ! From Extinction. By the Assoclated Press. In_practically single-handed combat | the National Park Service has under- taken to save from extinction the frumpeter swan. This greatest of American water fowl, which once Wintered in great numbers on Chesapeake Bay and in California, has been so nearly extermi- mi‘:td that only 30 to 50 are known to exist. Park Service hope. A few years ago nobody could find any. i Much like the more numerous whist- ling swan, but considerably larger, the trumpeter is the only swan which nests in_the United States. It weighs about 20 pounds and has a wing spread of 8 to 10 feet. In Yellowstone Park and adjoining sections their nests and little families have been found on islets in hidden lakes, 4 Naturalists of the service have been spending days, carefully hidden behind rocks, watching the cygnets (baby swans) through field glasses. In aimost every instance they found that the five or six cygnets who took their first swimming lesson the day they broke the eggs had dwindled to one or two within the first month. Lavens, otters, owls and coyotes are under suspicion. ‘Because the parks are the only places to save the birds, the naturalists are going to suspend one of the rules of sanctuary and will kill any animal found guilty of eating the priceless cygnets. But the evidence must be conclusive. Adult swans live 10 years, the natu- ralists say, if some ignorant hunter doesn't shoot them for geese. Swan shooting has been completely banned for years. P German writers and the Soviet gov- ernment are negotiating with regard to the p‘:otection of literary works in Soviet ussia. Yet even this remnant gives the | Relleve suffering from all forms of aching, burning PILES this quick, easy way. ealing ofls and unguents of PILE-FOB draw out and _soreness. Brings uick rellef. Money-back guarantes, 1_at good stores, School children should use only KLEENEX Disposable Tissues 'OTHER—you dread those contagious diseases that spread so rapidly among children == but are you doing everything you can to ward them off? Have you, for instance, taught immediately after using? ‘That is the way to protect your child from the diséase germs that lurk in dirty handkerchiefs. Almost all contagious dise: tracted through the nose and mouth. And you know how care- less children are with handkerchiefs anything ‘When Kleenex is used, germs are ‘destroyed. And at once. The cost of these soft tissues is so low that Mother, think! Can you permit your child to risk the dirty hand- kerchief, now that this new, sani- tary handkerchief has come to take its place? Nothing like it There's nothing like Kleenex for sa rienced in ts_superior the Preumococcus, Streptococcus (pus germ), Staphylococcus, and Catarrh- alis, A handkerchicf used only once during a cold was tested and found to be teeming with germs. Dirty handkerchiefs are a menace to societyl ML “For Luncheon at I” This chic model of can- ton crepe has many of the new 1931 gestures, for in- stance Chanel’s wide gir- dle—second, Empire puffed sleeves and back draping. Shown in black, green, tile and brown. $25 ‘For Late Afternoow’ This transparent velvet jacket costume with a light top frock and elbow bands of baby lynx— which make it all the more ravishing—will take you smartly from late after- noon into evening. $35 Second Floor Affernmllfilsh/'@ns Change With the Hour Alfternoon fashions grow more formal and more picturesque with the hour! There is a type frock correct for early afternoon affairs . . . another for middle afternoon . . . and still an- other for late afternoon. Here we are showing you how the new Fall fashions readily adapt themselves to the individual needs of each hour between one and six o’clock. Living Model Fashion. Revue 3 PM. Tomorrow Second Floor “For Bridge at Two” You will find this perfectly fovely jacket dress of black flat crepe most appropriate! It has the very new and be- witching transparent yoke of turquoise chiffon with bead tracery. $25 “For Tea at Three” The young Junior will look her charming self in this de- mure, yet sophisticated after- noon frock of all-silk chiffon velvet. It has lovely, slinky lines and graduated bows of white lace. $16.50 “The Cocktail Hour” —will be a grand success if wearing this transparent vel- vet frock with all the ele- gance this romantic season demands! Greecian in line and with sleeves puffed in the Second Empire manner. $39.50 LANSBURGH’S 7th, 8th and E Sts.—NAtional 9800 B 15 (0 Al LR s ki No Connection With Any Other Washington Store -_—