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SIPMENT OF BEER ALLOWED IN IowA Test of Law Fails When State Officials Permit Inter- state Transportation. By the Associated Press. COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa, April 8.— ‘A challenge by County Attorney Rob-| ert Organ of the legality of an inter-| state shipment of 3.2 per cent beer from one “wet” State to another across “Dry” Iowa died late yesterday nfler‘ Btate officials at Des Moines had ruled | the shipment was lawful. | THE LEVENIXNG ENCR L AN STAR. WASHI Recovers ASSASSIN'S VICTIM SHOWS WHERE BULLET HIT. DEMAND FOR BEER Breweries Exhaust Stocks as Public Clamors to Ob- tain Legal Brew. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 8—Enough beer went down the hatch in the United | States yesterday to float a battleship. If breweries had been able to sup- ply all demands—demands which con- tinued to pour in today—they could have sold enough to have floated two | battleships. ‘Two truck drivers, who had been Rrrested while driving 600 cases of beer from St. Joseph, Mo., to Marshali, | Minn,, were released, along with the| beer, They were I C. Strassburg of ' Hardwick, Minn,, and Charles H. Bart- | low of Marshall. | The arrests had given promise of furnishing the Nation's brewers with B test case to settle definitely their transportation rights across States bar- xing the new beer. said he “conferred with every one I could get in touch with at Des Moines” before ordering the men's release, “To my mind,” he added, “this ac- tion means opening the doors to Iowa. Police arrested Strassburg and Bart- Jow and Organ announced he would charge them with illegal transporta- tion because their trucks were nof licensed as interstate carriers, and thus, he said, were subject to Iowa Jaws while in the State. At Des Moines, however, the attor- ey generals office ruled later in the @ay that, while Iowa has not legalizea gale or manufacture of beer, the State could not tamper with beer commerce between other States. TEST LAW IN KANSAS. {uit Brought in Federal Court to Per- mit Wichitiy Beer Garden. TOPEKA, Kaft April 8 (#).—Federal Judge Richard J. Hopkins took under advisement yesterday a suit to test the Jegal status of 3.2 beer in Kansas, a pioneer prohibition State. “The new Federal beer law,” argued ftnlmd Boynton, State attorney general, "doesn't make it lawful to sell beer in Btates where the laws prohibit it.” Atk the Kansas “bone dry statute, Ernest Chapman, Wichita, Kans,, taxicab operator, filed the suit to restrain Boynton, Sedgwick County and city of Wichita officials from inter- fering with his plans to operate a beer garden in_Wichita. J. H. Brady, his attorney, argued that Kansas, having ratified the eight- eenth amendment, was amenable to laws enacted upder it by Congress, in- cluding the new act legalizing beer, and that the State dry law was un- constitutiopal “in that it attempts nullify Pederal statutes.” He. presented affidavits signed by two b in support of his contention th:t 3.2 per cent beer was not intoxi- ing. Boynton said the Supreme Court had theld that -t was. Judge Hopkins indicated he would not Bct on the case for two weeks, Chap- man declined to say whether he would g& ahead with his plans pending a de- INJUNCTION REFUSED. Missouri Judge Refuses to Halt Beer Sale in State. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo, April 8 (P)—Circuit Judge N. G. Sevier re- fused today tO: issue a temporary in- junction against the sale of 3.2 beer in | Missouri. The suit filed yesterday by dry lead- rs, seeks to have declared void the | rgency clause of the law legal- BEER'S REVENUE AID Estimates of the quantity of 3.2 beer sold during the first 24 hours of its legality ran {rom 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 barrels. Twenty-one States and the District of Columbia participated in the pro- duction and consumption of the new brew. Roughly estimated, a population of 70,000,000 people found beer avail- able to them. But there was not enough. In St. Louis, one of the world’s great brewery centers, parched throats had to be carried for blocks late in the day be- fore finding a place where taps were not yet dry. Overtaxed Facilities. Several New York breweries were | obliged to halt deliveries because of | shortages of barrels and bottles. They caid there was plenty of beer on hand, but that public clamor for it over- | taxed facilities. Revenue by the bundreds of thou- | sands of dollars accrued to various | governments—city, State and Federal— as the number of ‘“dead soldiers, sometimes referred to simply as empty | bottles, grew. Efforts to estimate it | today were futile, so swift were the sales. Forty carloads of beer moved out of 10 BE FELT MAY 1 Treasury Will Then. Know alone; et it reported being far behind it 3 0! TS, - How Much Red-Ink Def- £in cliy found thelr most energetic et~ icit Has Been Erased. DETECTIVE WILLIAM SINNOTT Shows where the bullet hit him which | was fired by Zangara in his attempt to assacsinate President Roosevelt. He also shows part of the bullet. “This is| a piece they got out,” he said, “but there are a couple of mcre pieces still in. | I'm feeling fine, though.” He returned | to New York from Miaml, Fla, yester- day. The bullet entered over his left eye and came out over the left ear. —A. P. Photo. forts unequal to the demand. .The South was the only section of the Nation where the alcoholic but non-intoxicating beverage was only a headline in the newspapers. Legis- lation looking toward legalization of By the Associated Press. the sale of beer is under way in some2 It will be the erfd of -April before the Treasury will know how much of | its red-inked deficit has been washed out by beer. The collectors of internal zevenue make their report at the end of the month and a little later the figures will be made public. Under the usual cus- tom, the tabulation would be made pub- lic about the middle of May. ‘The Treasury statement for April 6 showed today that less miscellaneous internal revenue had been collected for the month than was collected in the | same number of days in March. For the first ‘six days of this month, miscellanecus internal revenue amounted to $21,304,753 compared to $24,083784 for the same number of days of Jast month. In each case the collections were approximately four times as much as collected in the similar period of 1932 because of levies imposed in the billion- dollar tax bill. ‘The miscellaneous revenue since last June is nearly double that collected the previous year, amounting to $609.866,- 906 as compared with $391,084,819. Income taxes, however, continued to fall off, amounting to $567,825,657 for the fiscal year, as compared with $856,- 680,397 the previous year. Customs duties also dropped amounting to $193,- 321,618, as compared with $275,087.394. thumbed down by the lawmakers. Verdict Is Favorable. ‘The probability that initial enthusi- asm to take aboard samples of the beverage which has been an outlaw for 13 years would ebb after the novel- ty wore off, was expressed in several quarters. The public verdict on the quality of the brew, however, was generally favorable. ‘With consumption heavy, an oppor- tunity was given to observe whether the beverage pre-Volstead brew. The observation | attendant hilarity, there were no signs | of intoxication attributable to 3.2 beer. . In New York City for the first time in months there was not one arrest in the 24-hour period ending last mid- night on a driving while drunk charge. A check of police stations disclosed no arrests from 3.2 intoxication. With the first day of sales hardly over, Joseph Dubin, editor of Brewing Age, expressed the opinion that if con- sumption continued at its present rate, & national shortage of beer would re- sult in 10 days. The bombing of the Prima Brewery in Chicago, early today was the first untoward event to interrupt the jolly optimism that appeared—at least for the first day—to be ready to go along | in double harness with the brewery's | big horses. The damage was not great, izing the new brew, thu¥ paving the way for a referendum. Judge Sevier's decision automatically ts the case for hearing at the term of ourt which convenes May 15. BUSINESS PICKS UP THROUGHOUT NATION AS BEER RETURNS (Continued From First Page.) urg, W. Va., reported draft horses are t a premium for Eastern breweries. Several hundred men went t6 work {lemode breweries in five Indiana ities, ‘and in fectories supplying caps d cases. A St. Joseph, Mo., brewery 500 men in contrast to 225 a few ecks ago. A survey of Newark, N. J,, showed ‘that beer had sent an esti- ated 2,000 people back to work. In Itimore newspaper advertising in- reased as vendors of rye bread, cheese ®mnd other accessories hastened to place “their announcements ,alongside beer i*ads.” The demand for keg staves gav boost to some lumber men in orthwestern lukanis. A Harrisburg, Pa., hewspaper profited wo ways from beer. Some advertise- ents announced beer for sale, while me restaurant took space to say it ould not sell beer. | NEW HIGH LEVELS REACHED. Pun & Bradstreet Report Expansion in 1 Business Volume. ! NEW YORK, April 8 (#).—The week- v review of Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., esterday said volume of business. in ome lines has expanded to new high evels for the year. The review listed etail sales, stimulated by the Easter arket, as expanding, with merchants eporting “encouraging consumer re- ponse” to increased newspaper adver- ising, lineage of which in some in- tances is running nearly double that Yof 2 year ago. i On 24-Hour Schedule. CHICAGO, April 8 UP).—H. F. Ernst, resident of the Prima Brewing Co.. an- | Jounced orders on hand for beer would | Hpecessitate operation 24 hours daily, in- luding Sundays Steel Scrap Advances, . PITTSBURGH, Pa. April 8 (#).— he range of heavy melting steel scrap s now $9.50 to $10 a ton, an advance { 50 cents a ton here. Car Deliveries Increase. DETROIT, April 8 (®.—L. G. Peed. eneral sales manager of the De Soto E{umr Corporation, announced retail eliveries during the week ended April E were the biggest in nine months. A otal of 1,296 cars, a gain of 20 per cent ipver th b Ay RNNAPOLIS EXHAUSTS ! ITS SUPPLY OF BEER e previous week, were delivered, vecial Dispatch to The Star. 7 ANNAPOLIS, Md, April 8—Local iistributors of beer after delivering 7,600 bottles of the foamy beverage ‘Annapolis today exhausted their sup- lies and trucks were sent to breweries Baltimore and Pennsylvania to re- ock. Approximately 2.400 cases were dis ibuted to the stores clubs, resta nts, hotels and other licensed estal HARRIMAN TO FACE COURT ON MONDAY Accused Banker, Suffering From Heart Ailment, Ordered Ar- raigned on Bank Charge. | and the bombing was ascribed to dis- | gruntled jobbers who had been disap- pointed in their failure to get deliveries on their orders. The sinister, unspoken threat of “re- | prisals” by wildcat brewers, gang-con- trolled, to compel speakeasy operators | to continue buying beer from them in preference to the legal 3.2, had not translated itself into action today. The speakeasy owners, in fact, were for the most part glum in the New York area, as they watched patrons pass up their i)sull highballs to toss down legitimate ager. Some of the New York beer gardens, | especially in the Yorkville section, con- | tinued to do the same thriving business they have enjoyed through the prohibi- tion era, with the exception that the | beer now was legal. In some places last night both bootleg and 3.2 beer | were being sold. The latter being cheaper. Accessories In Demand. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 8.—Joseph W.| ‘Harriman was ordered yesterday to ap- pear in Pederal Court Monday morning for arraignment on 14 counts of mak- ing false entries in books of the Harri- man National Bank & Trust Co. The founder and former chairman of the bank was indicted Thursday. Judge Frank J. Coleman issued the order after consulting Dr. Howard F.| Shattuck, the ‘banker’s physician, who | said Harriman suffered an attack of coronary thrombosis, a serious heart disease, December 3, but had recovered but it was obtainable without much | trouble for those willing to hunt out sufficiently to move about his Fifth |places where it was sold. Pruit juice avenue apartment. stands on Broadway were leaders in “If he is able to get about the|the nickel beer dispensing, using 6- house,” the court said, “he is able to ounce glasses. The general charge come to court.” throughout the country was 10 cents George S. Leisure, attorney for Har- | for an 8-ounce shell, riman, submitted affdavits from Dr.| In Indiana, cases of beer sold for as Shattuck and two other physicians high as $3.25. In New York the aver- saying that any physical or mental |88€ .price was $2.25, with chain stores strain might bring on another attack. | Selling three bottles for 25 cents. After the hearing Leisure gave out ‘Accessories” dealers were participat- another lengthy statement in behalf of D€ in the business, as citizens devel- his client, saying Harriman did not OPed appetities for pretzels, cheeses, wish to make &n issue of his condition, |Pickles, balogna, salami and that sort but that he was “a gravely ill man, not | Of Victual. Store windows gleamed with el el L e R | steins, glassware and every apperte. o z nance to beer consumption. Many merchants told of an unexpectedly | large d{mmd for pitchers and tumblers. | Trucking concerns were among the numerous groups which benefited from | the legalization of beer. Brewers in | many cities found their own trucking fleets inadequate to meet delivery de- mands, and called upon trucking com- paifles for hilp. arge quantities of lager added railway ?mgm and exgxeu buslr:gfll.h' BREWERY 1S BOMBED. Chicago Blast Attributed to Small Jobbers Spurnéd by Plant. CHICAGO, April 8 (#).—The new beer’s second day of legality in Chicago was marked by the bombing of a brewery—a form of intimidation used by racketeers. The Prima Co.’s plant at Blackhawk and Halsted streets in the near North- wesi Side industrial area, was the ob- ject of the attack, when a dynamite bomb, exploded near one entrance, damaged an iron door and shattered a dozen windows. A force of employes was on duty at POLICEMAN IS INDICTED Accuser of Frank Nitti, Capone “Enfcrcer,” Is Held on Charge of Assault to Kill By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, April 8—A policeman was indicted yesterday on a charge of as- sault to kill for the shooting of “Public Enemy, Frank Nitti. The Indictment was based on testi- | ?uny that Police Detective Harry Lanz | red four bullets into Nitti, former “enforcer” for Capone gang orders, as he stcod unarmed and with his hands at his sides, The shooting took place last Decem- ber when Lang and four fellow police- men raided a downtown office. Lang was shot through the hand. An indictment charging Nitt with attempt- iny * the detective was voted after | the swd by a grand jury, but the “pub- | lic enemy’ was freed when Lang re- | fused to accuse him before a Criminal | the time, working to speed up beer Gt dory | deliveries, but none was injured, and “I don't know who shot me” Lang|the amount of property damage, the insisted, even when confronted with g | Police estimated, would not total more transcript of testimony before the grand | than $1,000. y. in which he made a charge that | The policemen who investigated the .1 drew a weapon first. bombing said they knew of no motive Nitti was freed. Lang was charged | for the attack, but Matthew Ernst, chief with perjury for his grand jury testi- | €ngineer and a member of the concern’s mony. | board of directors, theorized that it was The more serious charge was made | done by jobbers who were disappointed after another policeman Jestified Nitti | because the brewery declined to fill re- was unarmed and standing with his | Quest for small quantities of beer, rejec hands at his sides when Lang fired. | ing them in favor of the larges orders. “Lang must have shot himself.” the —— DR. HOLSOPPLE’S TOPIC policeman said. “Nitti had no gun.” At the Church of the Brethren, to- phs Sl % morrow at 11 a. m., Dr. F. F. Holsopple, OLD EXPLOSIVE SHUNNED | the pastor, will speak on *“And the lishments yesterday. Some of these to- gay reported their supply exhausted. ‘The demand for licenses at the Mu- h;i?al Building continued unabated. orty-three licenses have been approved by the City Council and 21 applications ‘mre before the body for action Monday izit. The clerk of the local Circuit ourt has received 17 applications for lo {p.the county. Under the law these Teust we advertised, B < himeom i v Z ABERDEEN, S. Dak, April 8 (#).— Brown County commhsion‘ll‘s want to | Whole, City Was Moved” referring to the make the court house safe, so they ar: | triumphal entry of Jerusalem by Jesus irying to get rid of a small box contain- | At 8 p: m, will be the presentation of ing nltmgqycerln which has been stored | the biblical drama, “The Half of M in a basement vault for several years. | Goods,” by the Dramatic Club of the Bids on a contract for removal of the | church. explosive—evidence used in a bank rob- | On Easter Sunday Dr. Holsopple will bery trial years ago—ranged m $15 | speak on “Easter, the Pledge of Im- to $1,000. ‘The man asking §.000 said | mortality.” he chose that figure in case be had bad | anthem, “Be Thou Exalted. Juck, | Heyses, SURPASSES SUPPLY| | States. In others, the brew had been the “authority” of | | of police officials was that despite the Nickel beer was not the usual thing, ! Sex Determined In Advance by of Electricity l | ‘Animals React to Experiment of Moscow Institute Head. By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, April 8.—Sex pre-deter- mination in the reproduction of cer tain animals is claimed to have been achieved by Prof. Nicolai Konstantino- | vitch Koltzoff, head of the Moscow In- { stitute of Animal Breeding. \""An electrical treatment which sep- arates the male and female elements of spermatozoa is reported discovemed by { the scientist. Offspring of either sex desired can be obtained. it is said, by injecting a solution of the opposite sex in the female. The operation was performed on three female rabbits. The first, impregnated artificially with male spermatozoa, bore six females; the second, with female spermatozoa, bore four males and one female, and the third, with mixed spermatozoa, gave birth to two of each sex. The professor said the second bore one female because of difficulty in ob- taining complete isolation with the ex- perimental apparatus. He said segregation also had suc- ceeded with roses, but that impregna- tion has not been attempted. He stressed the importance of the discovery in ani- mal breeding. It was first determined, he said, that male and female organisms react dif- ferently to electrical current. Natural spermatozoa were deposited in the curved end of a horse-shoe shaped tube and the tube was filled with a “physiol- ogical solution,” one of the chief ele- ments in the discovery. A slight elec- trical current then drew male and fe- male elements to opposite ends of the tube. 0™ 1™F anD HE INDIANS ARE COMING General | 9:30 | —Th Thrower (demonst: old method of hand and dishes). CumiNa, Firte FLOOR. WoopwARD & LoTHROP See How Pottery and | hina Are Actually Made Exhibition Here All Next Week Literally a Pottery in Actual Operation A Pug Mill (clay maker). Jiggerman and Batter-Out (forming plates and flatware). Dishmaker and Caster (form- ing of hollow-ware, bakers, ON committee for. the war chest for t]«:e campalgn DRYS ORGANCZED TO COMBAT REPRAL 5 = In Edgerton said: \ “Priends of the eighteenth amend- ment will be gratified to know that Avoid Immediate Effort to Test Constitutionality of Beer Act. and functioning. | greatly heartened by the ‘cordial co- operation of the officials of the leading dry organizations, and by the progre: sive voluntary enlistment of, many in dividuals who are dry in their views, but who have not been heretofore ac- tively affiliated with any organized dry | groups. We grow more confident every Determined to fight for fetention of | hour that we shall not only defeat the the eighteenth amendment, in the va- | precipitate effort to stampede our| rious jousts for repeal, looming in the Nation at a time of great economic different States, the National Prohibition | stress into turning back the clock of Emergency Committee of Nine, headed moral progress to conditions which pre- | by Col. John E. Edgerton of Lebanon, | vailed prior to the amendment, but Tenn., named by & recent prohibition | that with the aid of the effects of the rally here, held its first meeting yes- | ‘beer bath’ in which our country is terday afternoon in the Investment | now wallowing we should be able to re- Building. Fifteenth and K streets, and | ratify the eighteenth amendment. organized for the combat. | “It grows more evident that there are | The committee is the spokesman for | many people who are confusing the ad- | 42 dry organizations that assembled | ministration of the law with the law | here early last month at the National | itself. The unsatisfactory conditions to Prohibition Emergency Conference. Out | which they point as their objections to | {of that deliberation came the decision | the amendment itself are, in fact, in-| |to appoint the National Prohibition | dictments only of the unfortunate | | Emergency Committee of Nine, which | methods adopted for the enforcement | | comprises: Col. Edgerton; S. Earl Tay- | of the law. These people are in many | lor of Pasadena, Calif., executive direc- | cases as sincere in their antagonism to | tor: John A. McSparran, secretary of |the liquor business as we or anybody | agriculture of Pennsylvania; Dr. W. S. | else, and we share with them their dis- | Abernethy, pastor of Calvary Baptist appointment in the results of the ad- | Church here; Dr. John L. Hill, South- | ministrative methods employed. We ern Baptist Publications, Nashville, | believe that proper and adequate cor- | Tenn.; Bishop H. Lester Smith, "4, E. | rections can be made in enforcement | Bishop, Cincinnati, Ohio; Louis J. Taber, | methods by recognizing their weak- | master of the National Grange, Colum- | nesses and addressing ourselves to that bus, Ohio; Dr. Norman V. Peale, pastor task. This, however, will be possible | of Marble Collegiate Church, New only if we retain the eighteenth York City, and Mrs. A. E. Hedstrom of amendment and keep the liquor busi- Buffalo, N. Y. ness outlawed and keep our Govern-| : ment from going into partnership with No Beer Test Planned. it and sharing in its profits. Spokesmen for the committee said| “Practically all good people recognize |that there is no immediate intention |that the business is in fact a social |on the part of that group to test the |outlaw, incapable of reform and insidi- | constitutionality of the beer act, as the | ously rebellious against any sort of G StreETS Prone District 5300 EASTER Greeting Cards, Party Favors, and Névelties may be found in great variety . —and at very Ilow prices—in our STATIpNERY SECTION, END OF Amgiz 6, Fmst FLOOR, Novelty Candles For Easter Entertaining 10c Tiny yellow chicks, bun- nies, tulips—that can be arranged most attractively beside place cards. Also, larger hyacinths, in yel- low, pink, and orchid. Wax Rosebuds, for birth- day cakes. S-inch Hyacinths. ....15¢ Taperlite Candles in vel- low and the new daffodil, besides a variety of colors. 10-inch, 60c dozen; each, 5c h, $1 dozen; each, 17Y;-inch, $1.10 dozen; each, 10¢ Decorated Tulip Candl 10 and 12 inches tall, 1 pair CAnDLES, SEVENTH FLOOR. Electric 1933 Model 10-Tube Radio This new G. E. radio fea- tures many improvements that make it well worth its price. 10-tube super-hetero- dyne set using all newly de- veloped tubes, improved dynamic speaker producing tone of greater range, im- proved automatic volume and tone control. The cabinet is a beautiful 18th century design, 6-legged console, in 2-toned walnut finish. Complete with tubes. Pay as little as $8.40 down. RADIO GALLERIES, Fourtr FLOOR. 14Y;-ii AM. to 5:30 P.M. Through the cooperation of the United States Potters Association and the Nationafl' Brotherhood of Operative Potters, we have ar- ranged a very interesting and in- structive demonstration on the ac- tual making of pottery and china. Six demonstrators will explain' each process and illustrate the va- rious steps. We invite you to at- tend—any day from Monday, April 10th, “to Saturday, April 15th—9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. e Exhibition Includes . . . 5. Decorating (transferring of decalcomania, lining, stamp- ing). 6. Tunnel Kiln (arranged with fans and flickering lights to give the effect of a tunnel kiln in operation). A car with sag- gers (fire clay box in which .china and pottery are placed while being baked) goes through the tunnel automati- cally. “ rating the -potting). “We are, therefore, all good people of the Nation, without reference to previous attitudes, to join us in the endeavor to retain and re-ratify the eighteenth amendment, and thus pre- serve the better opportunity to mak the necessary corrections in enforce- ment and administrative methods for the ultimate elimination of the evil.| ‘We recognize that the responsibility for | enforcement must be decentralized and distributed in proper proportion among | the States and smaller units of gov-| ernment. Such changes in the present administrative acts as will accomplish this more effective enforcement should and will be insisted upon by all who want the traffic abolished, but the task now is to keep the business officially regarded as a public enemy by retain- ing the amendment. “Never were the American people called upon to make a more important WoODWARD D™ U™ axp G Srmwe ent emergency distinction between the substance of principle and the particular methods by which the principle is to be are clearly necessary and desirable.” Sail on Second Honeymoon. SAN PEDRO, Calif.,, April 8 () — Starting on a “second honeymoon,” in- stead of contesting in & Domestic Re- lations Court, James Orofton, Agua Caliente turfman, and Mona Rico, film . actress, sailed yesterday for Honolulu She filed suit recently for separate maintenance and $2,000 a month tem- porary alimony, but they later an- nounced a reconciliation. & LoTHROP Priowe Distmicr 5300 Miss McClure, Butterick Pattern Representa- tive, will be here -Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of next week. Consult her about your dressmaking problems. PATTERN SECTION, SECOND FLOOR. An Exceptional Opportunity to Meet Personally (Godora Gos One of America’s Leading ‘Beauty Consultants Here All Next Week This is a delightful opportunity to enjoy, without cost, a personal consultation with Miss Barbara Gould, whose achievements have placed counts less women on the road to greater lovelirtess. Discuss with her your complexion troubles and how to select the make-up best suited to your individuality. She will skin needs and advise you on sonal attractiveness. Miss Barbara Gould is tell you the care 'your matters ofj per- known from coast to coast through her weekly radio talks. “Listen in” on WJSV next Monday and Wednesday, at 11:45 A.M,, to hear her beauty talks. She is famous as well for the “Four Creams for the Four Ages of Beauty” that help to make one radiantly lovely. As Miss Gould is to be'here only next week, we suggest you phone for an appointment—telephone by when shopping. DIstrict 5300, or stop ‘TorLETRIES, AISLE 16, FIRST FLOOR. Mon'day.— April 10th —We Open, as a Regular Service, The Dr. Scholl . Foot Comfort Section In Our Women' s Shoe Section A representative of Dr. William M. Scholl, the eminent authority on feet, will be in attendance daily to analyze your foot troubles and advise as to the Dr. Scholl appliance or remedy neces- sary to give you immediate relief. A Pedo-Graph impression made of your stockinged feet without obligation to you. This Section is Planned as a Permanent Feature of Our WoMEN’s Smors, THIRD FLOOR. Shoe Section There is Still Time to Have Your Easter Clothes— Dry Cleaned —if You Call Us Today or Monday Our Quaiity Dry Cleaning Service will restore, as nearly as is possible, your clothes to their original freshness. There is a vast difference in the quality of dry cleaning now being done—we do only the best. Prices include collection and delivery, by our regular delivery service. Phone DIstrict 5300. Day CLEANING DEsK 11T AND G STREETS CORNER, FIRsT FLOOR.