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A—14 AID PLANS RAISE HOPES OF FARMERS Renovized Board Expected to Start Work Soon on Mortgage Relief. By the Assoclated Press. President Roosevelt'’s new approach to the farm problem, row aggravated and dominated by emergency financial crises, today revived the econom'c hopes of the farmirg population. Overshadowed momentarily as an in- dividual issue by the immensity of the banking situation and banking confer- ences, the farm problem nevertheless remafned still unconquered. But the very nature of these banking considera- tions, dealing as they do with troubles of slow assets which include billions in farm indebtedness, prompted Capitol observers to select mortgage aid for the 1nitial Roosevelt attack. In suport of their conclusion, they pointed to the speed with which the Chief Executive planned a consolidation of farm lending agencies in the Farm Board and selected as the head of. this organization his close adviser, Henry Morganthau, jr. Method Undecided. Just how Mr. Roosevelt wauld utilize the renovized board to accomplish mort- | gage aid still was undecided, but that it would receive speedy attention was the universal impression. This phase of the general farm situa- tion grew to pre-eminene in the session Jjust closed and furnished the only two pieces of farm legislation to reach the statute books—the bankruptcy law and the Feltcher-Steagall land bank act. The first of these supplied machinery | for scaling down the debts, but depend- | ed for success on the willingness o!' creditors. Sponsors considered the | bankruptcy bill only a step toward ful- filling the greater needs of the farmer. The second was a limited mortgage extension plan. It was restricted doubly in its operation—first by reach- | ing only the 12 per cent of farm mort- | gages held by Federal land banks and | secondly by aiding these farmers only | to the extent of a $50,000,000 fund. Value-Raising Steps Promised. t*t#ttttt‘tttttt‘t‘tttttt#!t‘tt‘#t‘t"ttlatvt#‘tttttttt#t#t‘tt‘tt‘ttttt‘tttt‘ AGAIN BY BENEFACTOR Mrs. Charlotte B. Randall Supplies Sandwiches During Inaugural Ceremonies. Mrs. Charlotte B. Randall, oft-times benefactor of the policemen and fire- men of Washington and nearby Mary- land, further endeared herself to the District’s blue-coated guardians of law and order during the inaugural cere- monies. Three thousand sandwiches r- chased by Mrs. Randall from a Con- necticut avenue barbecue were dis- tributed among Police Chief Brown's stalwarts who were stationed ;long t.he parade route and on other which prevented them from len\1n¢ their posts to obtain food The recipients included the police sent here from New York, Philadelphia and other cities. Mrs. Randall, the widow of a New York insurance company official, lives at 3707 Ingomar street. — POU IS NOW HOUSE DEAN AFTER 32 YEARS’ SERVICE North Carolina Representative Be- gan Career in 1901—Health Retarded Seniority. Representative Pou of North Carolina today became dean of the House with | the retirement of Representative Haugen of Towa. Mr. Pou has represented the fourth district of North Carolina since March 4, 1901. He started two years before John N. Garner, who on Saturday be- came Vice President of the United States. Twice Mr. Pou stepped aside in his seniority right to the speakership be- cause of his health. When Mr. Garner was elected Speaker of the Seventy- second Congress, he was supported by | Mr. Pou, who even offered to relinquish the chairmanship of the powerful Rules Committee to aid Garner. Mr. Pou also has served four more years than Representative Rainey of Tllinols, the Democratic choice as suc- cessor to Garner, but did not enter the speakership race. Instead he sup- ported Representative McDuffie of Alabami The new President has promised | mmm “definite efforts to raise the values of agricultural products.” Agricultural students in Congress pointed out that hand in hand with the values of prod- ucts go the values of farm lands and the worth of farm debts. A feeling persisted among many Democrats that raising prices will be a tedious process, depending perhaps upon ultimate improvement of interna- tional trade relations. While these processes are working, some congres- sional spokesmen considered it essential to force a more speedy reduction on farm indebtedness. | They contended that slashing debt charges while prices are seeking higher levels will restore more quickly a pros- perity ratio between the two. A direct assault on the ruinously low prices has not been forgotten. The domestic allotment plan of last session was such an effort, but it was opposed strongly in some farming areas and died in the Senate under a vigorous at- tack from President Hoover. Members of the House Agriculture Committee, where it originated, frankly say they do not know whether it will be pressed anew in the special session, but if so0, will more than likely be restricted to wheat and cotton. ‘Weighs War Declaration. ASUNCION, Paraguay, March 6 (#).— The Chamber of Deputies will meet | today to consider a formal declaration of war against Bolivia, with whom Paraguay has been engaged in warfare over the Gran Chaco border area. AIR PASSENGERS AIR EXPRESS U.S.AIR MAIL Information and reser- vations for all airline destinations. EASTERN AIR TRANSPORT SYSTEM 808 15th STREET, N. W. (National 7161) ‘WASHINGTON AIRPORT (National 3646) WASHINGTON - NEW YORK EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR YORATONE \ Nf“' NTISEPTIC at HALF the price of other Quality Mouth-washes V‘ICKé\ At your druggist’s TRIAL SIZE 10¢ (a 25¢ value) The Senate has ndorced the declaration. owder... cleans teeth as nothing el se can Doubly Efficient At Only Half The Cost HERE is nothing known that will clean and polish teeth so quickly and leave them so glcnmmg white—as POWDER. That is why your dentist, when cleaning your teeth, as you know— always uses powder. Asit is only the powder part of any dentifrice that cleans, a dentifrice that is ALL POWDER’ just naturally cleans best. Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder is ALL POWDER—100% cleans- ing properties. This is more than twice the cleansing properties of tooth pastes. Dull Teeth Become White For over SIXTY ‘YEARS—dentists every- where have prescribed Dr. Lyon's Tooth Powder, because—teeth F|mplv cannot remain_dull and film coated when it is used. It cleans off all stains and tartar, and polishes Dr. LYON’S In use over 60 years the teeth in & harmless and practical way thatleavesthemsparkling—many shades whiter. Dr. Lyon’s is the only dentifrice old enough to prove it can be safely used for life. Free from all grit or pumice, it cannot possnbly ecratch, or injure the softest enamel, as years of constant use have shown. Dr.Lyon’sTooth Powderkeepsyour teeth REALLY CLEAN and clean teeth mean—firm, healthy gums, free- dom from pyorrhel and the least pos- sible tooth decay. Lasts Longer = Costs Less use Dr.[yon’s Tooth i’ov\ vder, you will never be satisfied to use anything else. It leaves yourteethfeelingsomuch cleaner, your mouth so refmhed and your breath 80 sweet and pure. Dr. Lyon’s is not only doubly efficient, but it costs only half as ‘much to use. Even a small pack- age lasts twice as long as a tube of tooth paste. TooTH POWDER | | i ( ‘*#tr**‘y#t*‘**#"***W*#*##‘#*t‘**#*##lfl*###t*#*t#*#t*t#***#}****‘*ttt***tt##t*‘t**#ttttttt#t*tt*vtttt# ok ok ok kK ok Kk kK ok ok kot ook i e ook ok kiR Kk k(K THE EVENING STAR, WAS Third Word-Building Contest Now On Gold Medal FLOUR It’s Kitchen-tested zoc 12-Ib. 42(: 24-1b. 81c con VEG +e+WITH THAT HOME MADE TASTE Phillips Delicious Vegetable Soup can save you good cooks an hour or two of time and a cent or two at each serving. You need not tell a soul that your soup Is not home made. It has the home made flavor and richness and wholesomeness—characteristic EASTEEN B\ of all Phillips Deliclous vegetables ¥ SHOMt and soups. Sold at popular prices. V QUALITY with ECONOMY When first you serve a can of Phillips Delicious Vegetable Quality in each can, quality Soup you'll get a real surprise. that you would hardly expect to find in an item pri On our recommendation serve one can ness will so thoroughly sell you on this item you' to serve it . . . and often, too. 3 CHUM tall cans cans for Very Specially Priced This Week Deming’s Recipe PINK Salmon Dromedary Dates Sanico brand e Pancake FLOUR euissiey Almond Bars .5 Salmon roq seerere Peanut Butter or Ginger Fig Bars "« BUTTE Canned ‘Grapefruit SILVER SLICE — full _tree-ripened fruit—so easy to serve and so delicious to taste and so ECONOMICAL. bars Sanico 2-1b. jar No. 2 lOc Juice B s Pomorang = 1 2c¢ ::.2. :.:x:.‘:'fl:ri{{: "l:c'.:':r:?‘ 4 for 45(: FRESH RIPE TOMATOES. . .. 3 s 250 Iceberg Lettuce . . . . .2 bests 19¢ Fancy Spinach. ... .. .3 ms 20c Sweet Potatoes. . . . . .4 m 10c Kale or Collards. ... . .3 m= 10¢ Rutabagas . ........3ms10c NAVEL orANGs. ... 0 = 15¢ E Rk kK K R R ok ok kR KK K K K R KR R K K K K R R R K Kk R KK K K ik K K KK R KKK K K R R R Kk ok K R R R KRR KKK KRR KKK KA KKK - . its delicious good- 13c 2 15¢ .« a]Qc pkg. 1 5¢ Log Cabin Syrup " . 27 15¢ Ya-lb. . . an]Bc . . b Land O’Lakes...............2™55¢c JumboRoll..................2™=49c Sanitary Print...............2™49c HINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1933% DOG FOODS Don’t forget the dog. You can effect con- siderable saving by buying a dozen or a case at one time, Ken-L-Ration . . .2 cans 25¢; S . $4.95 Vitamont. . ... .2 eans 25¢; S22, $4.95 Doggie Dinner ... . . . ean 10c; S, $1.95 In Our Meat-Markets VEAL SALE! You'll surely appreciate these savings on best grade veal. Fancy Veal Cutlets. .......» 35¢c Rib Veal Chops. . . ve..m 23c Loin Veal Chops. . ........» 29¢ Shoulder Veal Chops. ......n 19¢c Shoulder Veal Roast. . .....n 14c Breast of Veal........... » 10c y’s Puritan Skiced Cooked Ham . 25¢ Rib Lamb Chops. .........n 27c Loin Lamb Chops.........n 35¢ Lean Boiling Beef..........n 7c Fresh Ground Beef........n l4c End Pork Chops..........n 13c Chipped Beef s’ %1 10c Sliced Swift’s Premium Bologna. . .» 15¢ Puritan Sliced Bacon Clover Sliced Bacon. . . .. Brigg’s Pep Pork L] Original Phillips Sausage. . Figh for Lent Fresh Trout. e Fresh Buck Shad. B ) Sliced Halibut. . . ... Fillet of Haddock. . . Fresh Croakers. .. .. Kraft American Kraft Velveeta Kraft Pimento o 1 5c Pabst-Ett...............ms 15¢ Chateau.. . .. .. 15¢ Lowest pri California as long as they last * Walnuts . 19¢ Peaches 5. 2r 25¢ Del Monte ... . 2 == 29c Del Monte Peas . 377 49c Royal roit Fiif - 21c . o Db 18c Cheese Fine Quality .« .. 2115¢ Pork & Beans g, 3= 13c Oats i’ e B e 10c Wilkins Coffee &= . ® 27c Preserves x.uwiew . ™ir]5c e« 3=m10c Sardines 2o, Sardines ot o Now 1(0c 2 15¢ DENSED ETABLE | This price ..n 17¢ .. 29¢ n. 25¢ iced 30 low. 'll continue . 23¢; 45c¢ Standard Oysters. . . . 19c Catsup . . 15¢ Honey o e o e 14-o0z. jar ocoa e ks v b e Tk Syt et oeiee | PiondGreen Bag Coffee i 25¢ 15¢ 215 =30 | | [BRY’S MILK, 2= 9c e 38¢ 25¢ | HONEYDEW PINEAPPLE | Lima Beans 15¢ C Om Shriver’s Blue Ridge No. 2 25 c sy B sl zi:. 15¢ “the old reliable” Tomatoes “crea: No? 25¢ longer at this price. 25 = C | Uneeda Bakers - HUNT’S PRUNES . HUNT’S PEACHES sl Certified FRESH. . ...... Specials! 22¢ THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL SATURDAY NIGHT’S CLOSING 27c OK Laundry Soap . 10c King Oscar Sauerkraut .7 TOMATO JUICE . recommended by doctors and dieticians for its health value Campbell’s. . . Libby’s. . . o Hurff’s ... .. Clark’s 25 5-1b. bag S Del Monte e o No. 2can ~ 23 10¢ Ing cans Carton of a dozen Carton of a dozen Peter-Pan Whole Grain Corn A No. 2 size can of PETER-PAN cakes for big boxes Ala Mussolini cakes for small cans WHOLE GRAIN GOLDEN BANTAM OK Washing Powder , COLLEGE INN La.. . the ..ni-.lo.a mp(-l- Fo'Sdcr form. 2 9c SPAGHETTI loc va Hand Soap 3 COLLEGE INN Zn;".‘.“i.‘i'r:.'.i'.‘:.:.l,':.'a"fn'Z's".?.."l'...fl‘:'.‘..‘i‘ifl":.?i‘.’..'.‘l"' 3 1 c RICE DINNER....... 106 Fish Flakes . . e IDAHO BURNHAM'S & MORRILL’S—need we say gw 1 7c, 29c POTATOB P .l 0 Ibs, zsc Shoe Peg Corn . . . 3%225¢ | aiimmr: i ini o thd 'IZ?:.‘._..'."J:" Senibte. C;".".‘.f"::.f..’.'f:r:..." S Thin! et fta i zae1l quaiiy York Apples . ... ....4m 15¢ product, and this price is sensationally low. 'I'!n!lx (:‘r:pefmlt e s 1 for {zc White Star Tuna . . 2 %% Qe | ClioniaCarmots | 7015 T b, T T s e e BULK ' ” ' e orances...... 9™ 18¢ cans kK K R kK Kk ROk ko R K o P ol oo kg ok ok ok K ok | i ok o R o T o R ke kK k| * ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok kR ok R R ok R R R K KR R kR kK Rk kR ok ok ok kRl R ok ok ok ok ok ok ko ok ik ko ko ko ke ok kR ok