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NONUMENT LA DISAPPONT PLOTS Flyers Report Capital Shaft Is Obscure After Flood of lllumination Ends. Night airmail pilots who hailed with| satisfaction the announcement the| ‘Washington Monument was to be flood- | lighted from base to pinnacle are won- dering just what they will get out of the lights, which since their in- S'-‘tlrll:tlml have been turned off at mid-i‘ night. | From nightfall to midnight the Monument is a shaft of silver, visible to pilots for many miles. After mid- night it returns to its former darkness, illuminated only by the red beacons which - shine trom its top windows. ‘The mail pilots who go through the Capital after midnight have reported | THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1931 to local field officials that, except for the red lights at its top, the Monument is as obscure as it ever was. On ordinary nights, they said, the red lights are adequate warning to any pilot who knows that the Monument is so lighted, but on nights when the “ceiling” or bottom of the cloud layer jown below 500 feet, they pointed out, the red lights will be obscured and will be of no aid at all to pilots who have v come in below the clouds. On such nights, the floodlllhnnf would mark the shaft clearly, they said. ——— ASKS $10,000 DAMAGES Margaret W. Day Sues Chamber | Official for Auto Injuries. Margaret W. Day, 2813 Fifteenth street, has filed suit in the District Supreme Court to recover $10,000 dam- ages from Alvin B. Barber, an official of the United States Chamber of Com- merce, for alleged personal injuries. She says she was riding in an auto- mobile September 16, 1930, at Fifteenth and N streets, when a machine of the defendant, driven by his son, collided with the automobile and caused her to sustain serious injury. She is rep- resented by Attorneys McCullough and Luckett. 5000 HEALTH DRVE PLANNED | sociation Will Discuss Ways and Means Tonight. A plan to spend almost $50,000 in 1932 on the most extensive program of community health work ever under- taken by the Washington Tuberculosis Association will be discussed tonight at 2 public meeting in the United States Chamber of Commerce Building on the eve of the opening of the association’s annual sale of Christmas seals on Thanksgiving day. Plans To Be Outlined. Ways and means of meeting the in- creasing necessity for anti-tuberculosis work will be outlined to the meeting by Dr. Kendall Emerson, managing di- ROASTERS SPECIALLY PRICED Liske Enamel Roaster “Wear-Ever” Aluminum DuLIN @ MARTIN Connecticut Ave. ana l” I_PARKING SERVICE—Connecticut Ave. Entrance. Hours 9 AM. to 6 P.M. with drip-pan, 89¢ 6-1b, size REGULARLY $2.00 10-1b. i 3473 REGULARLY $6.00 14-1b. Size $5.75 REGULARLY $6.50 e = |Washington Tuberculosis As- | rector of the National Tuberculosis Association; Dr. Joseph A. Murphy, chief medical examiner for the public schools; Dr. Thomas Kidner, New York expert in sanitarium construction, and George Hastings, administrative secre- tary to President Hoover. At a meeting vesterday the Board of Directors of the local association unani- mously approved a budget totaling nearly $50,000, the largest ever set by that body and the hoped-for goal of the Christmas seal sale. Health Lectures for Adults. It was decided that a program of health lectures for adults will be ex- tended to every fleld of industry, under a committee headed by John Dolph, general manager of the local branch of the Metropolitan Insurance Co. The ntion of the directors was i corners . . catches . . LuccAcE, FOURTH FLOOR. a WobbDWARD & LLoT —The Christmas Store - wrsr-alE. AN H et That Suit... Get That Overcoat... called to the in prevalence of tuberculosis among the colored popu- iation and to the necessity of more ex- res. With the help of trained workers in the fleld, it was said, a survey of exist- ing conditions will be made to pave the way for more clinical examina- tions, more hospital facilities and for the discovery and correction of tubercu- lar tendencies by these means and by l;l enlarged program of health educa- tion. S s Son Born to Dorothy Dwan. LOS ANGELES, November 24 (#).— A six-pound boy was born yesterday to Paul N. Boggs jr., son of the oil executive, and Dorothy Dwan, {urmerl film actress. ‘f‘"b ‘\v,‘ Wobbpwarp & LotHRop —The Christmas Store D e An Excéptional Luggage Offering Leather Gladstones Low Priced $ I 5 An unusually low price to be sure, especially when you note that they are sturdily made of long-wearing pigskin or various grained cowhlde, There is a steel frame around the center of the bag . .. . solid brass lock, pin tumbler style, and . short top straps . . lining, that is very attractive and durable, 24 and 26 inch sizes, in suntan, russet and black. How wise to select tomorrow, for yourself and for gifts. Also—Limited Number of Winship Migrator Wardrobe Hat Boxes, $12-50 reinforced . and linen crash oP from those on sale tomorrow in The Men's Store at The $25 Suits—worsteds, twists, serges, and basket weaves, which will look better and wear longer than any other suitings we know. Splendidly tailored—a feature most unusual in $25 suits—in single and double breasted models. and belted models. The $25 Overcoats—fine Whitney fabrics, famous for appearance and serviceability. Tailored and finished in the most careful manner by one of America’s largest overcoat makers. Single breasted, double breasted, Men—get acquainted tomorrow with the real clothing value offered you here in these $25 suits and $25 overcoats Tmx MEN's Store, Seconp Froor. | SENTENCED FOR LIQUOR Thomas 0. De Boe, Father of Daisy, Actress Ex-Aide, Gets 150 Days. LOS ANGELES, November 24 (#).— ‘Thomas D. De Boe, father of Daisy De Boe, former.secretary of Clara Bow, film | actress, was sentenced yesterday to serve 150 days and pay a fine of $1,000, fol- lowing his conviction on a liquor posses- sion charge. He was arrested last October 10 by | vice squad raiders, who found De Boe !with liquor. His daughter is in the | county jail serving a sentence for grand ! larceny from Miss Bow. Ly ' Burchell’s Famous Bouquet Coffee A Superb Blend 25¢Lb. N. W. Burchell 817-19 Fourteenth St. N2 WodppwarDp & L.oTH Box of three Linen Hand- kerchiefs for men - col- ored borders and _ini tials ....$1.50 Fine White Linen Hand- kerchief — colored em- broidered cut-out initial, $1.50 Men's White Linen Hand- kerchief, rolled hem and embroidered white ini- Handkerchiefs, box three different 1, rolled hem ....75c_each Women's Printed Linen Handkerchief with fancy colored embroidered 35¢ POTTHASTEPOTTHAS Custom Hand-Made ANTIQUE REPRODUCTIONS Direct from ths Makers Removal Sale Drastic Price Reductions Owing to need of larger space thru Increased demand, and befors move Ing to our new location on Connectis cut Ave, we now offer our entire stock ef our own hand-made Din- ing-Living Bedroom furnpiture Est. 1802 Potthast Bros., Ine. This $22 value 38.75 i 1388 10th St. N. 18232 over all. ®t Dupont Cirele and Conm. Ave. Baltimore, Md. New York city 924 N. Charles 8t. A Fifth Avenue Men's Very Fine White Linen Handkerchief, with cmbroidered initial set in drawn-work design....$2 Colored border and color- embroidered Initial make ally smart.. Color-embroidered Initial on White Linen, rolled 50c bordered White Linen Handker- chief with smart colored s Very Fine Men’s Very Fine Em. broidered White Linen Handkerchief, hand-rolled hem Men's Hemstitched White Linen Handkerchief, with embroidered white ini Men’s Embroidered Tni- tial White Linen Hand- kerchief with wide hem- hite Linen Handker- chief with embroidered white initial in unusual design .81 each Colored Border and Col- ored Initial on white linen .. Printed en Handker- chief with colored em- broidered initial 50¢ HANDKERCHIFFS, AISLE 20 FIrsT FLOOR, stitched hem Women's Fancy Printed Linen Handkerchief with embroidered initi i Fine Colored Linen Hand- kerchief with embroidered initial in contrasti ing Box of Three Smart Linen Handkerchiefs with embroidered initials, all