Evening Star Newspaper, May 21, 1933, Page 26

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m DAY STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. MAY 21, 1933—PART TWO. THE HOME GARDENER Practical and Seasonal’ Hints for the Amateur for Beautifying Surroundings of the Home. I SHRUB PRUNING ' The best time of the year to prune fmany shrubs is now at hand as they ‘complete their blooming. By doing the work at this season the plant’s ener- gles can be directed to the young growth which will bloom another sea- son. In most cases the old flowering wood will not bloom again and simply encumbers the plant. Pruning should not be drastic ‘and, in-fact, need not if done each year. Where the s of several stems. as in Spirea Jouttei. two or three of the older ones should be cut off at the ground and the remainder thinned by | cutting out some of the shoots which have just bloomed. By following some such plan, new shoots will be encour- | aged and in a few weeks ope will| scarcely be able to see where the cut- ting was done. Consider the ungainly form of old shubbery which has not been pruned. The flowering wood stands out on the ends of long, straggly branches. Beauty is gone, not to return, but if moderate, regular pruning is practiced, the plants can be kept thrifty and beautiful for | & great many years. Plants that should shortly receive at- tention_include the forsythia, wiegelia rosea, Deutzia gracilis and D. Lemoinei. BY J. W, WELLINGTON. An example of intensive home gardening in which no space is wasted, yet the grower finds place for a row of gladiolus and of sweet peas, is shown. The prcductive capacity of a well fertilized and well cultivated garden is remarkable | argenate of lead and Paris Green. As lic at 4 pm. Mrs. Gertrude Moser is chairman of the Show Committee, A w own gladiolus grower, writ- | ing in the April number of the Gladio- Ius Review, Tecommends the treatment | of all bulbs prior to planting with cor- | rosive sublimate solution, or one of the ae Werms return to their nests at dusk, the!r destruction may be accomplished by simply gathering the nest and its inhabitants. which includes also Mrs. Towson Price, Mrs. Carl Smith, Mrs. George Middle- | ton, Mrs. R. Weeks, Mrs. Charles Pur- | Gum and Mrs. Louie Bellwig. | Although roses and iris will make up TH commercial organic mercury prepara- | i as a_ precautionary measure | against thrips and diseas: Corrosive | Some fine tulips were displayed at sublimate is used at the dilution of | the recent tulip show sponsored by the 1 part per 1,000 of water. The bulbs | Takoma Horticultural Club, despite the should be immersed for two hours and |lateness of the exhibition. A vase of planted while still moist. This ma- | pure white Vesta tulips, exhibited by terial is extremely poisonous and must | Edwin C. Powell of Silver Spring, was| be kept from chiliren and animals. |extremely attractive and a display of It should be mixed in glass or wooden | Louis XIV blooms grown in the garden containers, as it is highly corrosive to|of Winn T. Simmons of Takoma Park | any of the metals. Such treatment is | received much praise because of the inexpensive for small lots and may |size and fine condition of the individual easily save a lot of disappointment|flowers. Indian Chief, grown by Mr.| later { Bowell, and rectplent of the avard as . est bloom in the entire show, well | b:{)‘tm (’;‘9,,5"5‘?‘}“;? i‘:‘z;‘:lsgm O{hfl“d}:}‘;: merited this distinction, its coppery red, | bulbs. be planted no closer than six | Perfectly shaped cup being singularly an important portion of the display, | classes are provided for all flowers in| season including shrubs and vines. Ar-| tistic arrangement will be stressed in | the basket, bowl and vase classes. The | judges will be Mrs. M. B. Payne of the | National Capital Dahlia and Iris SO-‘ clety and Aubrey B. Carter, past presi- dent of the Montgomery Suburbani Garden Club. Dr. H. R. Watkins, president, reports | that the annual Spring exhibition of | the Montgomery Suburban Garden Club | will be held at the Somerset School on | May 27 and 28, opening on Saturday | cvening at 7 pm. The schedule in- qlude$ a wide variety of classes in cluding roses, iris, peonies, herbaceous | == | PuBLIC LIBRARY THE GOLD STANDARD. This is the first of two lists on monetary problems, prepared by the reference department of the Public Library. The second list, on inflation, will appear in these columns next Sunday. | BOOKS. Crisis in the World’s Monetary System, | by Gustav Cassel. 1932. HMA.C26. | Rhodes lectures at Oxford in 1932 discuss “changes in the nature of the gold standard, the monetary crisis and the gold standard’s breakdown.” Gold Standard and Its Future, by T. E. G. Gregory. 1932. HMA.G864. An English economist analyzes the nature of the international gold stan- dard. “The book exhibits no bias and should be read by every one who desires a compact and competent treatment of some of our most important problems. International Gold Problem. 1932. HMA.In8. Addresses at the Royal Institute of | International Affairs, which give the | views of leading economists and finan- | ciers, none the less interesting because frequently in disagreement. | Financial Aftermath of the War, by |~ _Sir Josiah C. Stamp. 1932. HT.St27. The American reader will find much of interest in these lectures by a British economist on some of the chief aspects of post-war finance, as taxation, in- flation, deflation and international debts. An appendix discusses “What is the gold standard?” PERIODICAL ARTICLES. Gold: A World Problem. Annals of the | American Academy of Political and | Social Science, 165: 171-227, Jan- uary, 1933. Eight articles by various authorities on: The gold standard before and after | the war; increasing ratio of gold pro- iducucm to business; gold and interna- tional trade; gold and credit; the par- tial abandonment of the bold standard 1931-1932; Germany and gold: the L{mted States and gold, and the gold clause. The Gold Standard and the Administra- tion's General Economic Program, by B. M. Anderson, jr. Chase Eco- nomic Bulletin, 13:3-21, May 6, 1933. All of the new powers granted to the President under the Thomas amendment to the farm bill involve great danger, if used. The new cur- rency legislation can only be unde: stood as a political compromise. How ever, by “a wise selection from among the powers it is possible to work out a consistent and effective program of re- covery by international agreement to ettle interallied debts, reduce trade | Councll on Radio n Education series,| T the basis for most' proposals of | which throws light on the difficult | monetary reform is the belief that questions of the gold standard in its| there is not enough gold in the world, ; international aspects and the need of here is their refutation.” World gold some international agreement as to the | stocks have increased since 1913, but use to be made of credit control. | “of the gold zf the wgr}g. ;ppr:xii,mitclg Rigid? by | 70 per cent is now* held by the Unite - gf"p_""v’;".rfe'fi.‘“"fwrgmi‘.’f’ 39??94_201’: | States,France and Belgium, and it is April, 1933. becamse of this maldistribution of the! Arguments in favor of modifying the | matel tHat King Gold is not able to! gold standard. A discussion of the mect the demands of world commerc causes of the depression, the relation of | The Financial Situation. Commercial & gold to prices and the need for stabili- | Financial Chronicle, 136: 3023-24, zation of commodity prices, and means| May 6, 1933. by which this might be effected, such| An editorial to the effect that the as credit expansion, currency expansion, | United States has “taken a step back- revaluation of the dollar, managed cur- | ward toward the darkness of the Middle rency, the compensated dollar, re- | Afies” because Government obligations monetization of silver and international | or interest on United States securities co-operation. | held abroad will not be paid in gold. The Challenge to Gold, by Garnault|This is considered repudiation of a Agassiz. North American Review, | contract which cannot be defended from 235:247-253, March, 1933. | a legal or a moral standpoint. LAST 3 DAYS! Fresh Stocks of Rosebushes _and Shrubs Reg. 25¢ Grades Now Only— e« e that eight to 12 inches is | autractive. This variety is, unfortunately, too far apart if space is available, 1s Toots may be found nearly two feet rom the bulb. As to depth, six inches s conceded practical, as plants from ulbs set this depth do not suffer so ntensely from Summer droughts and, urthermore, require no support. At he time of setting, the soil is tamped irmly to bring it into close contact | with the bulb. It is pointed out ihat vhile the gladiolus responds to good oil and liberal fertilization, it will recause of stored food in the bulbs, o well on rather poor soil and is, herefore, a_good plant for newly de- eloped gardens in which the >oil has ot reached a high state of fertility. As a further protection from thrips 1e following spray may be used from -3 time plants are six inches tall until looming time: Paris green, one Junged_tablespoonful, common brown rather high priced for general use, but| perennials of various kinds, vegetables | is worth bearing in mind. | and fruits. A special group is provided | for the children of the Somerset School. “Small Fruits for the Home Garden” |The Show Committee comprises H.| was the subject of Dr. L. H. Weld, guest | D. Scantlin, chairman; Mrs. F. H. Un- | speaker at the meeting of the recently | tiedt, August D. Werner, John Werner organized Garden Club of Falls Church |and Lawrence Smoot. The judges in- held May 16 at the home of Mr. and|clude Neil J. Hansen of the Whitman Mrs. L. H. Jackson, East Falls Church. | Cross gardens and Dr. Earl B. White of A constitution and by-laws for the new | Kensington, Md. organization were adopted at the May meeting and the following permanent officers and committee chairmen were | elected for the ensuing year: President, | Dr. Ernest V.°Miller; “vice president, | Dr. J. S. Cooley; secretary, Mrs. L. A.| Jackson; treasurer, Charles M. Matheny | z‘:mfmanhoxl szl'i;mEx(;‘Oll;E‘T“cwe- ?tr‘ ganization of American War Mothers 'ooley, chairman of b ommit- | e K eimbath: ehairman of Ex. | nd the State president of the District change and Co-operative Purchases| of Columbia were present atthe last Committee, J. Hugh Rose; chairman of ' meeting of District Chapter, at the American War Mothers ‘Two officials of the National Or- barriers and bring important currencies back to gold, and by reduction of Gov- ernment expenses.” United States Abandons Gold Basis as Price Aid. American Observer. 2:1, May 3g1933. A clear explanation of what it means 0 be off the gold standard and of the inflationary powers conferred on the President under the Thomas bill. Back to Gold, by David Lawrence. Saturday Evening Post. 205:21, March 18, 1933. “Gold is a symbol of stability . . . because through centuries it has proved a stable medium of exchange.” History shows that financial recovery has come | by resumption of gold standard. “Ulti- | mately Britain will return to the gold tandard, and so will the other nations of the world, for in all history it has Press and Civic Committee, A. J. Webb. Hotel Hamilton. Mrs. Virgil Stone, na- | proved to be the single standard on 1gaf, two pounds; black leaf 40, three | Flans are being made for one or more aspoonfuls, -and water, three gal- | flower shows to be held during the sea- ns. A spraying device with suffi-|son. This and other subjects of interest ent pressure to eject the material as|to home gardeners will be discussed at mist rather than as a rain is highly | the coming meeting. President Miller ssirable. | requests that all the members’ question- That thrips is a local menace none naires should be completed and turned | tional president, gave an account of plans prepared for participation in me- morial services of War Mothers at Arlington Cemetery on Mother's day. | Members attended the dedication of the | | time before the United States joined which international settlements in trade can be made from day to day on a stable basis.” The article is especially interesting since it appeared a short Great Britain in going off the gold standard. Althea Bush Honeysuckle Forsvihia Hydrangea Pee Gee . ROSEBUSHES Talismai W. Van Fleet, CL. pink General minot Gruss An Teplitz, American Beauty Climber, American Pillar, CL. crimson Dame Edith Helen, . pink Golden No Mail or Phone Orders Filled! 7th Street anny The Aveni"=Tih, Bih and O S SHRUBBERY Mock Orange Snowberry Snowflake Deutzia Spires Gotden ibush Cranberry n Paul's let, CL. m Radjance, HT. rose- pini Red Radiance, HT. Tose-ri red Sensation, HT. Silver Moon, CL. white Sunbarst s Angeles Rev. Page Roberts Willowmere Mad Steachler fJacaue- ' red & rold Ophelia. Basement COUNCIL PICKS OFFICERS Mrs. Grattan Kerans Honored by Democratic Women. Mrs. Grattan Kerans was elected president of the Women’s Democratic Educational Council at a meeting last weeX at the Mayflower Hotel. She succeeds Mrs. Clara Wright Smith. Other officers of the council are Mrs. Lester J. Pollock, vice president; Mrs. R. Kirkpatrick Noble, treasurer; Miss Lyda Mae Prancis, recording secretary, and Mrs. Mary J. Hefferman, corre- sponding secretary. Clinton Eilenberger, 3d, Assistant Postmaster General, was a speaker at the meeting. WILL REPEAT PROGRAM / Children of Neighborhood House to Present Playlets Again. Children of Neighborhood House will repeat the group of three playlets they presented during the recent Spring fes- | tival, it has been announced. Because of inclement weather, maz¥ people did not get to see the play- lets and they will be presented again along with folk dances Thursday at 8 pm. at the Seitlement House, 470 N street southwest. The. Chemical and Air Defense So- ciety of Russia is concentrating on the porduction of a fleet of giant airships, “GARDENAIRE"” | Air Perfume Makes the air sweet and pure in the Home, Office or Sick Room! £ .50c .78¢ ...$1.20 .$1.65 ..$3.00 2 Ounces 4 Ounces 8 Ounces 16 Oun 32 Ounces —Simply place one of these at- tractive GARDENAIRE holdees in every room and pour into it a little perfume essence. You'll have no more odors of stals tobacco smoke or reminiscen§ * whiffs of cooking after meals are over! One filling lasts for weeks—and the odors include Rose, Lilac, Oriental, Pine Needle, Bouquet, Chypre and Trefle. ; . Holders W isi00 Rosette .......50c Mandrain ...$1.30 ‘Toilet Goods Department— Street Flgor. A- Hair-Cut With Your ho had occasion to visit last year’s| arden Club show will gainsay. It is| mply impossible, in their presence, | ) grow attractive blooms. | I VEGETABLE GARDEN I In a Spring such as the present peas ive greater than usual need of sup- ort. Their growth is large and soft | 1d when the plants reach a_certain ze they fall to the ground. The use poultry netting or brush supports is | good investment, as the vines bloom | 1d fruit more abundantly when erect, | 1d the pods do not mildew. Further- | cre, if the wire is rolled carefully and 1t away in a dry location it will last any seasons. Staked vines use less | ace in the garden and this ftem may : quite important in the small home | rden. | More gardeners would grow asparagus | it were not for the fact that it is ad- sable to wait two years before cutting | ' any extent. Yet asparagus is an eal home garden plant, as it responds | adily to the attention usually given | ie home garden. One need not worry >0 much about the delay in cutting, *cause it is feasible to grow lettuce, | ish beans and other small vegetables | *tween the asparagus in its early years. | 1 fact, it is well to place the asparagus ws four or more feet apart. Once the :d comes into cutting it will, with care, | st many years. It will not'do to per- 1t beetles to eat the foliage nor to al- | w grass and weeds to take possession. | °t the home grddener grow asparagus | ace and he will not care to return to le store material with its pithy stalks ad lack of sweetness. After cutting | ie sugar in asparagus is quickly con- rted to less desirable materials, so 1t full quality is possible only in' the eshly harvested crop. I GARDEN NOTES The hardy clove pinks, loved by most | 7ery one because of their aromatic =grance, are among the easiest plants ) grow. A single plant will yield 2zens of blooms suitable for use in the ome. Best of all, the plants have no isect or disease troubles such as beset larger relatives, the green house Seed sown now will yield L year's blooming, fter presenting a | a great many gardens. The bulbs may be dug 1 two or three weeks and their place n over to tender annuals, or they soil. Practically it the bulbs, let them in an open crate or put them in paper clearly written on ecp better, as of the soil during Summer, more, such a procedure per- ation and grading of the replanting. The tulip ly *develop during the er, so that when Fall comes the r nesi year are formed eysuckle is more or less various plants, i the true - honey- d the wild utifies the to dig ry a few day asket and then with names digality of nature is well fl- ted by the oa from each tree which pollen h is shed to rtili literally millions of embryo corns. ‘The golden dust has been in vidence the past week or two wherever wuals or perennials, whether les or flowers will grow much if cultiveted. It takes patience to work along the rows of but the results warrant the Crocus foliage has ripened sufficiently o permit its cutting without injury to he next season’s plants. Daffodils are slower to complete their growth but along (abcugp the first of June all the oliage from the Spring ktulbs can b2 cleared away Secd production is a heavy drain on ‘he plant’s resources and as a result the plant slows down in growth and ceases blooming freely. Hence with pansies, nasturtiums and many other plants such as marigolds, zinnias, it pays to cut off the flowers as soon as they have passed prime condition Tent caterpillars have been unusually abundent this year on trees of wild cherry and crab apples. This pest can be casily destroyed by spraying with any of the arsenic insccticides, such as " ~ in at that time. new War Mothers' National Home, 1527 New Hampshire avenue, May 14. Mrs. Roscoe L. Oatley, State presi- | dent of District of Columbia, and who show of the Takoma Horticultural Club, | Was largely instrumental in the organi- making the exhibition which closed last | Zation of the War Mothers in the Dis- evening one of the most attractive in | trict, has written the autheptic his- the history of the club. The committee | tory of the District of Columbia Chap- in charge consisted of Fred Harries, |ter and presented it with the badge chairman: Dr. W. A. Hooker, Miss|she wore at the Secopd National Con- Margaret C. Lancaster, W. M. Peacock, | Yention held in Washington in 1919, to Mrs. E. B. Reid, Miss Ethel White, C. the chapter. Mrs. Susan Satterlee, New London, G- Carr and Mrs. Douglas Withers. | o ™ 0t of-town member of . the chapter, sent a substantial check to the treasurer as a Mother's day gift. The May 26 afternoon meeting, which was to be held at the residence of Mrs. J. Jerome Lightfoot, was post- poned on account of other The new auditorium of the Takoma Fark, D. C., school afforded a fine set- ting for the seventeenth annual iris The Woodridge Garden Club staged an attractive iris show Monday in the Sherwood Presbyterian Sunday School | auditorium. The variety Morning Splen- dor, originated in the District of Co-| lumbia by the well known breeder J.| day. Mrs. Charles Donch was in charge of the party given at Mount Alto Hos- by Mrs. G. L. Gee, won the sweepstakes as finest bloom in the show. Ballerire, exhibited by Mrs. Bozarth, was also very fine, and a yellow seediing displayed by its originator, R. H. Burton, at- tracted much attention. San Francit and Los Angeles, new and improved varieties of the Madame Chereau type, were deserving of praise. The club will stage its annual Spring | show May 25. embracing all species of | flowers in bloom in the garden, but| articularly roses. Prof. A. S. Thurston | of the University of Maryland and Neil J. Hansen, superintendent of the Whit- man Cross gardens, will serve as judges, the latter in charge of the roses. W.| L H. Gannaway, past president of the | assisted by Mrs. Joseph Phillips, Mrs Laura V. Dann, Mrs. Lucy Campbell and Mrs. Mary T. Shanahan. Ice cream, cake and candy were the re- freshments. Two dresser scarfs of linen, em- broidered with gold stars by Miss Florence Simmons. daugh:er of one of the members, will be given to the National Home for its Gold Star room by the District Chapler. club is directing the show and is as- | sisted by Mrs. H. D. Miser, Mrs. T. J. | | Llewellyn. Mrs. W. H. Gannaway, G. T. | Boul, R. H. Burtner, H. I. Goddard, R. | J. Haskell and F. J. Roy. Classes are | provided for flowers, fruits and vege- tables. The show will be held in the Sherwood Presbyterian Sunday ichool Building at Twenty-second end Rhode Island avenue northeast, in conjunction | with the silver jubilee celebration of the Rhode Island Avenue Citizens' Associa- tion. which will furnish decorations for the hall. Mrs. C. R. Forester, president of the Burleith Garden Club, announces that | the Spring flower show will be held on May 26 at the Mount Tabor Church, | patriotic | | Marion Shull, and grown and exhibited | events in connection with Decoration | pital last Wednesday cvening. She was | | 120 Carroll Ave., Takoma Rark, Md. Evergreens, Trees, Shrub: We Have 11, Million Plants on Our 600 Acrec i ¢ and take adventage of these prices. Every plant freshl, B o orapped. in burlap, ready for delivery. Orders of $3.00 or over delivered in Washington and vicinity. | Off the Gold Standard, by Walter Lipp- mdnn. New York ‘Herald Tribune, April 21, 1933. “By going off the gold standard we | do not pass from an unmanaged to a managed currency. We pass from a currency managed to preserve a fixed price for gold to one managed to pro- | duce and maintain & higher stable | average of all prices.” The International Gold Standard, by C. O. Hardy and L. 8. Lyon. Eco- nomics Series Presentation No. 22. | A discussion delivered April 22, 1933, | over the radio in the National Advisory | FARM AND GARDEN. DAHLIA BARGAINS Fine tubers. in best of condition. with fern, Bar sprouts. Ba | Wear, nd Seal’s California ne Cowl a | LY Ra. inor Vanderveer, Eva Je | Robert E. Lee, King || and “Mits “Atiantic City} the twelve, t| $8.05 value for $3.50. | {| " Botn collections for $1.00. | [ |, Txelve no two alike, fine ones, un-| HILKREST GARDENS | Shepherd 1818, SALE End-of-the-Month Optical Sale —If you need new glasses or frames—you’ll pay more for them unless you get them now! ile our present stocks last we are offering highest quality glasses and frames at prices that may never be repeated again. Complete GLASSES Examination, Lenses, Frame & Case 6.25 —Choice of three pink cr white gold filled styles. Extra Charge for Astigmatic, Tinted and Bifocal Lenses Dr. DeShazo in Atiendance L) Optical Dept. Street Floor The Avenua'=Tih, B ané D Sta. WAVE Kann's—Beauty Salon ‘Third Floor. This Week EVERA Wave and Cut Permanent Hair slo FREDERICS Wave cnt Mrir §1.50 2nd Hair Cat e 9O Shampoo, Finger Wave 7 e Cut | Thirty-fifth street and Wisconsin ave- Entries will be received up to 1 m. and the show opened to the pub- FARM AND GARDEN. | P, d hig nce transplanted Sitka Spruce ese Arborvitae Pyr. h. Orientals. Compacta, “Thua Byramidahs men’ Evercreen. for roup planting. ft. high. burlapped. $1.10 each. Colorado Biue Spruce 5 5 to 6 vears old. Two trees.. c 7-year-old trees, 1 tran a 2 Douglas DI Qarge fiower- Pink, putple, 1 10 143 1t, 8§¢ 50 ute 1 col- 85¢ lors bud) Noveity colors CORNU type) Znnias, 5o Sgidenstieen _and peautifu ) Strong Plants 85¢ JAPANESE BAKBERRY_ (4-yr grown), bushy. 10 t5 15 in., in RNIA' PRIVET “HED ~ PERENNIAL AND OCKERY PLANTS | (Blooming Aoe) Columbine, adl ‘colors. hock beautiful Yellow Daisles 6 colors: Painted Daisics. Gaillardias. Sweet Willlams, Forgct- Me-Nots, Physalis (Chinese Lantern Plants): Delphiniums, light and dark blue; Oriental Poopies. brilliant col- Foxgloves. Phiox. & brilliant ; Canterbury Bells, white and Yellow ~Alyssum. Gypsophila (Baby's Breath): Linum—Blue Flax, |_Order must amount to $1.10 or more. Order Now for May Delivery Eversthine Guaranteed. 0 Acres BARGAIN PRICE FREE i, S’ ADOLPH FISCHER NURSERIES Evergreen Dept. 11 EASTON, Pa. Please Add 28c for Packing Order colors orange -oid field- X ea. i § All plants are Westcott’s fine quality, not second grade material Take advantage of this fine weathe: to plant Shrubs and Evergreens Magnolia Grandiflora 4.5 ft. $1.95 _Azaleas Assorted 35¢ to 50c each Also Orange Colors 65¢ to 95¢ Retinosporas Green, Golden, Soc Each:..... Norway Spruce 3to4feet.........9c¢ Arbovitae 4to5feet.........85¢ Spreading Junipers Many varietics, 2.3 ft Blue, 2.3 ft. Potted Japanese Maplés $1.00 each Boxwood 10to 12in..............25¢ 12to 15in..............50¢c Pink Dogwood 5.6-ft. Heavy Plants Flowering Shrubs Leee 50c and 65¢ sizes. .. Mary other varicties of evergreens, tre: d shrubs are dug and ready for thi special sale. cotT NURSERY (0. FALLS CHURCH VA. Drive to Falls Church, turn left on Anandale road, which is 1,000 feet south of traffic light. Be sure and go 1} miles on Anandzle road and turn into nurseries at sign to office of Westcott Nursery Co. Office is 1,000 feet from the main road. Phone—Falls Church 400 A wPotograph of YOU ...and YOUR CHILD Special Offer! I Regularly 2 (Unmo: No need to remind you that our reputation for fine photographs is second to no one in town. NO APPOINTM WIVES is sufficient. ° if you would make his heart swell with pride, then give him ons FATHER'S DAY Sunday, June 18th nicd) ENT NEEDED 9 DOWNSTAIRS “New Home” “Free-Westinghouse” And Westinghouse Electrified Sewing Machines A3 2 1/2. —Floor samples and machines with cabinets slightly marred. Console, desk and table models in walnut, mahogany, oak and maple finishes. Nearly every type of sewing machine at greatly reduced prices. All machines mechanically perfect and equipped with the famous Westinghouse motors, adjustable knee control and attachments. Were $49.50 to $155 Now $27.50 to $67.50 Portable Machines, $23 to $49 Hemstitching—Now only . . «.5¢ a yard Repai , Cleaning and Adjusting..........$1.95 Kann's—Fourth Floor.

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