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A house of real distinction and character, not the ordi- nary “center hall type,” but one designed to fit a beauti- #ul site fronting the Park for over 250 feet. Unique and convenient in plan, built finely of stone and brick, to last for centuries. Usual living rocms, and five masters’ bed rooms so arranged they can be used economically for large or small family. And the price has been re- duced about 25%, to $30,250. Furnished with some inter- esting old pieces and open for inspection. See it today. 1704 Kalmia Road N.W. 'UXURIOUS Bmd D INING within YOUR The HAY-ADAMS HOUSE . . . Across | “Of Thee I Sing” ! Opens Sunday at National. EATS and boxes go on sale to- morrow for the engagement cf that hilarious musical sensatio: i “Of Thee I Sing,” which begins a week's engagement Sunday | night at the Nalional. The fact thet this hit is coming from [ {its phenomenal run of 55 weeks on | {Broadway, with jthe original cast { intact, headed by William Gaxton, Lois Moran and \ Victor Moore, has | heightened the in- terest in this en- gagement. It requires 11 scenes to tell the {amusing story of !“Of Thee I Sing," and these scenes are ecnlivened by | as many as 25 mu- sical numbers, of { which “Never Was There a Girl So Fair,” “Here Is a Kiss for Cinder- | ella,” “Who Cares.” “Who Could Ask | for Anything Mcre” and “Of Thee I| Sing” are the smesh hiis that have been whistled everywhere for the past | year. Lois Moran. “Parachute Jumper” At the Metropolitan. OMEDY and romance will share| honors of the special combination | program which will cpen Friday at| Warner Bros’ Metropolitan Theater. | The major screen offering will Yo Douglas Fairbanks, jr. in First Na- tional's “Parachute Jumper” with Bette Davis. The supplementary screen offer- ing will be “Dangerous Females” co- | Chinese heroine, created cn the stage | Radio,” and as an | Fricdland will ap- = JHy THE EV Helen Hayes and Novarro in he Son-Daughte:” at the Fox. screen version of David Be- | 1asco’s stage success, “The Son- | Deughter,” will open Friday at Loew's Palace Theaier, with Helen Hayes in the role of the by Lenore Ulrle, and Ramon Novarro playing the Chinese prince whose af- filiation with the royalist revolution has its aftermath in a series of po- litical intrigues and tong wars in San Francisco's Chinatown. The vaudeville bill will be headed by Georgie Price, known as the “Clown Prince of cxtra added at- traction Anatole pear in person with his company of 26, in a “Musi- cal Revusical Spectacle.” Make-up played an important part in the filming of “The Son-Daughter,” Miss Hayes having to undergo changes in hairdress and facial contour, while | Novarro sacrificed his appearance for | “art’s sake” to the extent of having | his head completely shaved. Others | who went an adroit transformation | from Occidental to Oriental include Lewis Stone, Warner Oland, Ralph Morgan, Louise Closser Hale and H. B. | ‘Warner. | Cthers to be seen on the vaudeville bill will be Jack Pillard and Al Hillier in “Glorified Nonsense,” with Lynn| Maybecry assisting; 'we, Burncff and | Wensley, presenting “A Satire on Balhi room. Dancing,” and the “Three St. Helen Hayes, NG _STAR. WASHINGTON, What's What and W here Attractions Soon to Be Seen in Washington Theaters Somme, Marne, Verdun, Chateau ‘Thierry, St. Mihiel and Argonne Forest. ‘The motion picture was compiled by A. L. Rule, himself a veteran of the World War. It has been so assembled as to give a correct history of ihe war from th ER Jerri McCauley Returns to the Gayety. (QFENING at the Gayety Theater this Sunday Jimmie Lake will welcome home for an extended engagement, Jerri McCauley and her “Tom and Jerri” girls. Miss McCauley has just closed an engagement of over a year's dura- tion in the burlesque theaters of the Middle West and 1§ returning to Wash- ington, the rcene of her greatest suc- cese. An all-new cast of well known | artists, in an all-new show, will support | this popular star, ameng whom will be | found Gladys Clark, Sid Gold. Rose | Marie, Nora Sullivan, Jimmy Dugan, gubhsnndmm Sam Raynor and Bimbo 2vis. New and beautiful scenic and elec- | trical effects will b2 introduced. Mon- day is gift night, Wednesday is money night and Friday is amateur night every week at the Gayety Theater, HOUSE GROUP EXTENDS GLASS-STEAGALL ACT Committee Approves Continuance of Using United States Bonds as Currency Security. By the Assoclated Press. The House Banking Committee unan- imously approved yesterday legislaticn | extending for another year provisions | of the Glass-Steagall act permitting Reserve Barks to use Government bonds as security for their currency. || The Senate has already approved, | and the House is expected to do so soon. The committee action followed testi- | mony Monday in behalf of the bill by Sccretary Mills, who said it hed “arrested” deflation and contended a failure to continue it would result in “contraction.” Representative Patman, Democrat of B ... ) ¥ RAILROAD-HIGHWAY GROUP URGES PLAN | Regulation of Bus and Truck Pro- posed by Committee Headed by Atterbury. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 25.—The Rail- | road-Highway Committec, headed by W. W. Atterbury, president of the Penn- sylvaria Railrcod, and Alfred Swayne, vice presient of General Motors Cor- PRAYERS COMMEMORATE LATE BISHOP HARDING Prayers In commemoration of the late Right Rev. Alfred Harding, second Bishop of Washington, were offered at the 7:30 am. services at Washington Cathedral today and will be repeated at the 7:30 p.m. services. ‘Today's services, in addition to being the 14th anniversary of th2 consecration of Dr. Harding as Bishop of Wash- ington, celebrate the feast of the con- | version of St. Paul. The regular weekly service of spe- | cial intercessions for those who are | unemployed and in trouble, for the | guidence of rulers and leaders, for the | Cathedral work and for the help, cf Vicks Makes S To Every Hygiene and Othe B€ 1 Offer Antiseptic User o cia L ks d Makes Possible, At Small Cost, Test of the New Vicks Mouthwash and Gargle—For Halitosis, Oral r Antiseptic Uses. Lo_cal Druggists Have Lim- ited Supply of a Special | Trial Size—A 25c¢ Value | for Only 10c. poration, has reached an agreement on | it3 clergy, officers, employes and mmds'i | a report recommending measures for regulating busses and trucks, according to Prof. J. J. Cunningham of Harvard, executive secretary of the committee. The accord, it is said, covers all tie major questicns which the committee has discussed except those concerning | rates for common and contract carriers and what maximum length a truck may have for highway operation, It is understood the report which will be submitted to the Naticnal Trans- pertation Commission will not include any discussien of these two peints, but the highway interests on the joint com. mittec may decide to file a supple- mentary report giving their views on the questions. Commodity prices in Chile are much higher than a year ago. | will be held at 4 p.m. Friday. § Watch, Clock & Jewelry $ ‘ 3 REPAIRING | $ CLOCKS A Specialty ¢ RIBBY'S: 0010000000000 00 + ARV, z 615 15th Street Next to Keith’s Estimates Furnished ] | ¢ | regular size s a large 10-ounce bot- { Met. 3629 ¢ Users. of mouth- washes, B gargles, antiscptic ~ loticns _can | now save more than | half the costs of this modern daily necessity. | This tremendous saving comes with the introduction cf the new | Vicks Voratone Antiseptic—by the | makers of Vicks VapoRub, | That all antiseptic users may test | for themselves its quality—and its | | economy—the makers have supplied | druggisis with five million bottles of | | 8-special trial siz> at less than cost.| | This is & 25c value, but is priced at | onlv 10c, while the supply lasts. Born in a deprasiion year, Vicks Antisentic is priced accordingly. The and | tle—a usual 75c value—priced at cnly | CUTS GARGLE AND MOUTH-WASH COST- 35c. This new low price level is made possitle by rccord low prices of raw materials—combined with Vicks mass production end world-wide distribution cf quelity produ Mild Enough, Strong Enough Vicks Voratcne is a balanced anti- septic. Mild enough to us: daily with- cut risk to delicate membranes. Stong enough to do cverything an oral antiseptic can and should do. Vicks Chemists could produce noth- ing better . . . and they were aided by the chemists, pharmacologists, and bactericlogists of their 16 allied or- ganizations, here and abroad. Vicks Antiseptic is designed, of course, for all the customary uses of an oral antiseptic. The most convincing evi- dence of its quality and savings is to get a trizl size of Vicks Voratone, and use this generous quantity in the usual way. Your druggict has it. Get a bot- tle todey for each member of ycur fam=- ily who uses an antiseptic mouth-wash, gargle or loticn. by Makers of VICKs VAPORUB IN HALF Just 10 Advanced Super-het SILVERTONE IMPERIALS Prepare Now for Inaugural Guests Metal Bed, Mattress or Spring . . . 95 | Texas, in futile opposition to the bill | Console Model as Illustrated |urged two amendments—one to T = | quire Reserve Banks to pay the Gov- | John Bros.” Phil Lampkin will ccn- tarring Marie Dressier and Polly 3 ’ | duct the orchestra. Moren. “Parachute Jumver” tells the story Smartly designed Metal the park Bed with baked-on brown from the White House Luncheon 85c De Luxe Dinner 50 SIXTEENTH AT H SCME WOMEN ALWAYS ATTRACT You want to be beautiful. You want the tireless energy, fresh com- plexion and pep of youth. Then let Dr. Edwards Olive Tablcts help free your system of the poisons caused by clogged bowels and torpid liver. For 20 years, men and women suf- fering frem stomach troubles, pimples, listlessness and headaches have taken Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, a success- ful substitute for calomel, a compound of vegetable ingredients, known by their olive cclor. They act easily upon the bowels without griping. They help cleanse the system and tone up the liver. If you value youth and its many gifts, take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets nighily. How much better you will feel—and look. 15c, 30c, 60c. Cushion Cbmfort Old flattened-out mattresses are cruelly unaccommodat- ing—causing fitiul slumber. But an inner-spring mat- tress “gives” to the slightest pressure — cushions every curve. Let us use the ma- terial in your old one. It will be sterilized—cleaned— covered with charming new covering of your own selec- tion. The work will be done in one dav at a cost of §9 and up. This is our factory- to-vou price. W not phone National 9411 our representative to call? ZABANS Nat’l 9411 r 903 E St. N.W. Break Up in a Jiffy This Quick Way Feel Like A New Man Almost Before You Know It People have found out that new- fangled ideas and notions don't break up colds. So millions have turned back to first principles and use what they know breaks one up in a_jiffy Get Hill's Cascara Quinine at any drug store. Take two tablets now. Then follow directions on box. Drink lots of water, too— that's all. Things will loosen up, your head swill clear; aching go. Soon you'll start to feel like a new person. Get Hill's now. It is a scientific formula made to do omne thing well; to knock a cold—not to cure a thousand ailments. Get vour money back if it doesn’t work with twice the speed of anything you've ever tried. PR——— — Gewattumnssan=tssaat ts with the United of two dare-devil pi States Marines in Nicarauzua who cap- ture a whole band of bandiis after hev ing been shot down. It follows their | adventurcus ¢ r to New York City, ! where the jcb-hunting experiences of the two soldiers of fortune after team- Ing up with a wise-cracking typist, also | broke and out of a job, provide many | amusing sequences. Besides Fairbanks | and Bette Davis, the cast includes Frank | McHugh, Claire Dodd, Sheila Terry, | Harold Hubert, Thomas E. Jackson and George Collins. “Hard to Handle” With Cagney at the Earle. | SLJARD TO HANDLE~" a Warner Bros.' picture, is the screen attrac- I tion of the program which opens Fri- dey, at Warner Bros.’ Earie Theater. It | marks the return to the screen, after a | vacation of seven months, of James Cag- |ney; Helen Kane, the girl who ogigi- | nated- baby-talk, and known as the “Boop-Boop-a-Doop” girl. will headline | ! the stage portion of the bill which also | includes the Radio Rogues; Reynolds and White; De Wolfe, Metcalf and Ford, and Maxine Doyle. “Hard to Handle” shows Jimmy as a publicity promoter who starts with a marathon dance contest in which an | actual dance marathon was used as a background, and ends up with 18-day diets, a treasure hunt, without treasure, | and two blondes. The pictures wouldn't | be complete if Jimmy didn't get his | blondes! Cagney's romantic partner is | Mary Brian and the cast is further en- i hanced by such favorites as Ruth Don- who shares ccmedy honors with Allen Jenkins, Claire Do<d, Emra Dunn, Robert | Hugh. G | McWade and Matt Barrymore Film in Special Opening Friday. | “SINCERITY is the key-note of act-i ing” So declares Lionel Barry- mare, in explaining how he.evolved his conception of Rasputin, the Mad Monk of Russia, whom he enacts in the first picture in which he, his sister Ethel and his brother John have appeared together. This is “Rasputin and the Empress,” a Metro-Golywyn-Mayer pic- ture that will have its Washington premiere at L&ew‘s Columbia Theater on Friday night. “SLudyyo! history reveals varied views of the man,” says Barrymore. “Some hold he was a scheming trickster, rul- ing the Russian roval fzmily through supcrstition. Others believe that he was a simple peasant, hypnotized by a religibus fervor and a creed that man can do anything he desires, be natu- ral, and then through repentance reach selvation. That was, of course, Ras- putin’s creed. “I am trying to play him as a sim- ple man, who, despite his sins, his gross appetites, and his illiteracy, had a con- stant faith that the Creator answers prayers, and through this faith was able to_practically hypnotize others to his belief.” Ethel Barrymore, in her first talking screen role, plays the fanatically re- ligious Czarina, and John is seen as Prince Paul, who eventually rids Rus- sia of the Rasputin incumbus. An elab- orate cast includes Diana Wynyard, Ralph Morgan, Tad Alexander, Gustav von Seyffertitz, Louise Closser Hale, Brandon Hurst, Reginald Barlow and many others of note. “Nagana,” With Tala Birell, At the Rialto Saturday. \ ILD animals tearing through the jungles of Africa are said to pro- vide danger, color and explosive drama for “Nagana,” the new Universal Pic- tures feature, featuring Tala Birell, the European film star, and Melvyn Doug- las, which comes to the Rialto Theater for the new week opening Saturday. Di- rected by Ernst L. Frank from an orig- inal story by Dale Van Every and Don Ryan. “Nagana” includes in its sup- porting cast Onslow Stevens, Everett Brown, Dr. Billie McClain, Frank Lackteen and Noble Johnson. It is a tale of forest, swamp, savage cruelty. the battle royel of the jungle animal hordes and the dark mysteries of the center of Africa, to which is added a love affair between a doctor, leader of a scientific expedition and a woman of the world. Miss Birell will be recalled as the feminine player who created a sensational impression in “The Doomed Battalion.” Newman to Talk on “India to Cambodia.” E M. NEWMAN'S second episode of > his around-the-world trip, to be shown Sunday afternoon at the Na- tional Theater, is called “India to Cem- bodia,” and ‘included between those points are visits to Ceylon and then by way of Burma and Penang to Siam. Every hour of the day is packed with interest as the tourist wanders through Bombay, Agra, Delhi, Benares and Calcutta and mingles with the teeming millions of strange people of many re- ligions, high and low caste, fakirs and fanatical holy men. The visit in this part of the world includes trips to Kandy, Cambodia and Angkor Wat. Boston Orchestra Plays Here Tuesday. THE Boston Symphony Orchestra, Dr. Serge Koussevitzky, conductor, will make its one and only concert appear- ance of the 1932-3 season, in the Capital next Tuesday afternoor 4t 4:30 o'clock at Constitution Hall, with Dr. Koussevitzky conducting, as the fourth attraction of ~Mrs. Wilson-Greene's artists’ series of afternoon musical events at that auditorium. The program includes Weber's over- ture to “Oberson,” Beethoven'’s “Seventh Symphony in A Minor, Opus 92"; Sibe- lius” tone poem, “Tapiola, Opus 112"; Wagner's “Waldweben” (“Forest Mur- murs”), from “Siegfried,” and the over- ture to “Tannhauser.” be obtained at Ml;:l | Willlam Anthony McGuire, Droop’s, 1300 G street northwest, and at Constitution Hall the afternoon of ghe concert, i | “The Kid From Spain” | Opens Friday at the Palace. ¢THE KID FROM SPAIN" with Eddie Cantor is to be presented Friday at Loew's Palace Theater. Nonsense and song, as nervous and | bubbling as Eddie himself, propel a | gay romantic fable of love under the | southern moon. | A bulifight is the comedy highlight | of the picture. Six bulls were hrought | from Mexico. Three songs ar: sung in which the blonde comedienne, Lyda | Roberti, joins Eddie. | Prominent in the cast are Robert Young, Ruth Hall, John Miljan, Carrol | Naish, Noah Beery, Stanley Flelds and Sidney Franklin, the Brooklyn boy who went to Spain and became the world's greatest bullfighter. Bert Ka'mar and Harrv Ruby wrote the songs. With they co- authored the story. The rest of the bill will consist of news flashes and an Our Gang comedy, “Free Wheeling.” War Film Opens Friday at Keith's. THE years wiil roll back on Friday 2t R-K-O Kcith's when “The Big Drive,” an official motion pictur> com- prising authentic scenes of battle, will | be presented. ‘The picture is as- sembled from the Government archives of eight of the then warring nations, both allies and central powers, and brings to light scenes which up until | now have never been presented to the public. Included among the sequences are “sho of actual hand-to-hand trench warfare. The spectator sess scme oOf th> most intense acticn in the greatest battles of the war, namely, Arcre, Starts Friday ' OEW § THE STAR of “FAREWELL to ARMS” and “THE SIN of MADELON CLAUDET” The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences have awarded film- dom’s highest act- ing honors to HelenHayes.Now, co-starred with Ramon Novarro, she challenges the screen world for this' prize again! Anatole Fri | ernment an interest charge when notes | are issued on Federal securities; an- other that the Goldsborough price sta- | bilization bill be added as an amend ment. Thursdad $\*fi PRESS CAFE No. 1 A Complete Sirloin Steak . Dinner PRESS CAFE—NO. 2 Thursday Special SIRLOIN STEAK oiner 40c & ress CAFETERIA < ional Press Bldg. E z 2—818 14th St.- N.W. Ko. SRAARIAAN AN | FOX edland e SON-DAUGHTER Belasco’s Stage Hit . . » Until now “Smilin’ Through” was M-G-M’s proudest film of the sea- son! We believe when your heart finds this new M-G-M romance on the screen, when your tear. filled eyes view its you will agree that one of the truly immortal love storiesofall time hascome! A METRO-GOLDWY in Talkies At Last! with LEWIS STONE - WARNER OLAND * RALPH MORGAN A CLARENCE BROWN PRODUCTION ety i M Scarborough end Devid Belasce. N-MAYER PICTURE THURSDAY ONLY ‘While Quantity Lasts Nationally Famous Limit, 20 Cakes d Floating Ivory Irresistible Lifebuoy Well Krown Fels-Naptha Billy B. Van's Pinetree Dainty Patmolive Clearance of Women’s Lingerie, Hosiery, Sweaters RAYON GOWNs, run-resistant, nd peach in regular and extra sizes. Clearance.... 09€ 80 EXTRA SIZE RAYONS, teaient Sl e Oep £ul chemise, “Blogmers. price . - 30, $1.19 FRENCH CREPE SLIPS, bias cut. Flesh. Sizes 31 to 42 in the lot. 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Clearance, box .. .o LINEN FINISH BRIDGE CARDS, nov- excellent lit; UST attractive, box. Jewelry Dept. Clearance 150 PIECES SILVERWARE. Tea soup snoons and forks; 10-year tee. Rei rly and Clearance. each....... 5¢ NOVELTIES; JUST Table. JEWELRY low priced, Yo Hars priced, $2.50 ance ALARMS. “Baby Regularly low and $3.50. Clear- llfl' Clearance of Children’s Wear gunatmxs, e cotms o o lot. fur-| ed. Clea: sweater, beret, leggins. Resu larly lew priced, §2.98. Clea ance 5 BOYS® 50¢ GOLF HOSE. part-wool, Smart tte: 3 lensth. Sizes 7% to 11. DELIVERED With 6 matched Silvericne Tubes. $2095 COMPLETE INSTALLED Range 170 to 550 Meters. Tunes in Police Calls. Only $5 Down Delivers This New Console Radio enamel finish Sturdy Springs, 99-coil con- struction; enameled. 5495 Clearance Restful Matiress, made of layer felt and covered with damask design ticking. Cheice of 3 sizes. 5495 Ask about our Easy Pay- ment Plan on purchases of $20 6r more. Smashing Stove Values! 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STREETS N.E.