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A-10® NEW YORK CASTS | VOTES ON REPEAL | Sweeping Wet Victory Likely Today Despite Slight Show of Interest. By the Assoclated Press. ALBANY, N. Y, May 23—With & sweeping wet victory conceded in advance by dry leaders, New Yorkers voted today to glleLrt 150 delegates to the State prohibition repeal conven- tion, which will be held in Albany, June 27. Although last-minute appeals were expected to bring out some additional votes on mte%ldd:ii’ an unusually light vote was predicted. New Ygrk is the sixth State to register an attitude toward the repeal of the eighteenth amendment. The other five States—Michigan, New Jer- sey, Rhode Island, Wisconsin and ‘Wyoming—were recorded as overwhelm- ingly for repeal. Most of the activity today was among the dry forces who are trying to bring out “the best possible show of dry strength.” Gov. Herbert H. Lehman was back in New York today after his brief Florida vacation, ready to vote for the coalition ticket of wet delegates. Former Gov. Smith, who in 192‘3 signed a bill repealing New York’s prohibition enforcement act, is among the wet delegates on the ticket and is slated to become chairman of the con- vention if the ticket wins. ———— FAMOUS SCIENTISTS TO BE GUESTS OF FAIR Five Nobel Prize Winners Will At- tend Advancement of Sclence Meeting at Chicagoy By the Associated Press. % t CHICAGO, May = leading foreign scientists, uludzm ive Nobel prize winners, will be guests of the Century of at the ninety- second meeting of the American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science here June 19-July 1, Dr. Phillip Fox, director of t,h;’ Max Adler Planetarium, has announced. National societies in all the different branches of the science and 37 affiliates have booked conventions concurrent with the meeting. The Nobel prize winners accepting invitations are F. W. Aston of Cam- bridge, chemist; Niels Bohr of Copen- hagen, physicist; A. V. Hill of London, physioclogy and medicine; August Krogh of Coj en, zoologist, and Theodore | Svedberg of Upsala, Sweden, chemist. Mme. Marie Curle, co-discoverer of radium, was invited, but will be unable to attend because of ill health. Minute Mysteries . Solution to ONE FOR THE ROOKIES Bee Page A-3. Stewart picked the owner of the poat without difficulty. He merely looked around until he saw a fel- Jow with trousers of the same color and pattern as the coat. ¥owll never pass! AN OBSERVANT MAN, UN- PERCEIVED, MARKS EVERY PERSON AND THING THE FIGURE EXPRESSIVE OF ITS VALUE AND THEREFORE IN- STANTLY ON MEETING THAT PERSON KNOWS WHAT DE- GREE OF ATTENTION TO GIVE IT—Jokn Foster, NEW LOWGI’ ares this summer to ca ifornia ROUND TRIP On sale daily until October 15 From Chicago 60% Round Trip COACH 50 Round Trip TOURIST 50 Round Trip FIRST CLASS Short Limit D FIRST CLASS Long Limit 80 90 Stop and visit (Grand Canyon,Indian-detours, Colorado Rockies. Famous Fred Harvey dining service “all the way” May we send you picture folders? G. C. DILLARD Dist. Pass. Agent SANTA FE RY. 302 Frankiin Trust Bldg. 8t. at 16th PHILADELPHIA. PA.. "o P’h*-: Rittenhouse 1464-1465 “ -~ New Navy Head WORLD WAR COMMANDER GETS OPERATIONS POST. REAR ADMIRAL J. K. TAUSSIG, Who commanded the first group of American warships to go to Europe dur- ing the World War, is the new assist- ant chief of naval operations. He re- lieved Rear Admiral Walton R. Sexton at the Navy Department Saturday. Admiral Sexton goes to command Bat- tleship Division 1. Admiral Taussig also served in the Spanish-American War and saw duty during the Boxer Rebellion. He was on duty in the Bu- reau of Navigation from August, 1918, to May, 1919. CORNS Instantly Relieved Quickly 7, J Removed ‘The safe, sure snd scientific 'way of treating corns is Dr. Scholl’s Zino- pads. All painleaves the sore spotat once. The eause—shoe pressure—is stopped. Tightshoesnolongerhurt. Used with the separate Medicated Disks, included in every box, they quickly and safely re- ‘move corns. No risk, no taping, no bother. Get a box today. Sold everywhere. DrScholls Zinopads THE EVENING EMERGENCY NURSES 10 BE GRADUATED Class of 44 to Get Diplomas at Hospital Tomorrow Night. A class of 44 nurses will be graduated from the Emergency Hospital Training School for Nurses at exercises tomor- row night in the nurses’ home at the hospital. The graduation eddress will be de- livered by Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of George Washington Uni- versity, and diplomas will be presented by Woodbury Blair. Miss Janet Fish Store Hours: 7:30 AM. to 5:30 PM Get Your Porch Painted Now Summer is almost here; already the days are getting warmer and the porch is calling for you more and more. A good coat of deck paint on the floor, and woodwork fresh- ened with a coat of outside paint, will make your porch more livable and more at- tractive. “FAIRFAX” Paint is ALL paint—NO water, but pure linseed ojl, zinc, lead, and tetanum. Buy it now, while prices . : are low, Gecw Brush ‘We have » very_ attractive line ot Toook " athondnnls Do " new brush gives better results, evener strokes and makes Daint go further. BuflerFlynn PAINTS—GLASS 607-9 C St. NW. Met. 0150 STAR, WASHINGTON, will present the nurses with their pins, and Dr. Leander Zimmerman, former pastor of Christ Lutheran Church, Bal- timore, will offer the invocation and benediction. Prizes will be awarded at the exer- cises to the students in each class hav- ing the highest scholastic averages dur- ing the past year. Miss Elizabeth hy will recelve the award for a third-year student; Miss Mildred Early, second year, and Miss Margaret Friend, first year. In the third-year class honorable mention for scholastic standing goes to Misses Louise Lee, Florence Bower and Lucille Perry; second-year class, Misses a Ellen Ledman, Retus Griffith and Hazel Ryon, and first year, Misses Ruth Jennings, Millicent Koelker and Pauline Woodward. ‘The members of the graduating class are Misses Alleen Bingham, Kathryn Ebersole, Olga D. Hamilton, Louise Lee, Mavorean Lemmons, Dorothy Lohr, Hazel McWhirt, Mary Jean Nesbitt, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1933, Virginia ‘Willeox, Saul, Jane Toepper, Mary Tuck Pauline Baker, 5, Presbyterian Church Faces Many Lucille Evans, 3 Nancy Jane Harman, Pauline Howell, Margaret Lee Jones, Gladys McDonald, Elizabeth Murphy, Elizabeth Nevitte, Bernice Orr, Lucille Perry, Dorothy Robertson, Viola Sheets, Eula Shomo, Isabel Snyder, Lina Stearns, Blanche Stewart, Esther Taylor, Audrey Tate, Virginia Walker and Catherine White. Lightning Kills Hunter. PURDIN, Mo., May 23 (#).—A bolt of lightning which struck the barrel of a rifle he was carrying on his shoul- der while hunting squirrels yesterday killed Eldon Giore, 24, near his farm home, 10 miles west of Purdin. The body was found by his father. Price of Beautyrest Mattress To Advance & on June 1st Advice received from The Simmons Co. gives & price until June 1st. us this opportunity to offer this quality mat- tress to the people of Washington at the $33.75 Try this Beautyrest treat- ment for 30 nights at our risk. If at the end of this time you are not perfectly satisfied, we will be glad to refund your investment, and the mattress will be destroy- ed. Convenient terms can be arranged to suit your budget. ‘We are also offering at this stme a Simmons ensemble som- of a_mahogany four-poster bed, a double deek coil lizers and a special inner spring mattress. In $33.75 complete, The “Rest” of Your days depends on the “Rest” of your nights H. A. LINGER Beds and Bedding 925 G St. N.W. Est. 1868 Phone Nat. 4711 Church in the United State of America, | Louis Presbytery favors every convening here Thursday, will be con- | two years, instead of annually &S &% fronted with numerous proposals that| present, while some Western presbytee it meet less often for economy’s sake. ‘ ries consider every three years enough. One proposal, suggested by the Pres- | All told, 32 of the 70 proposals bytery of Buffalo and concurred in by | be placed before the assembly are fl’- 66 of the church's 290 presbyteries, | cerned with some form of encomomy, & calls for fewer meetings and a reduction | according to Dr. Lewis S. Mudge of the Presbytarian in the number of delegates. The St. Philadelphia, stated clark. Dollar Value increased more than twofold WANT FEWER SESSIONS Economy Proposals. COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 23 (#).—The General Assembly Our Stock of Fine Clothes, Hats and Furnishings must be sold New Spring Suits—Greys, Tans, Fawns, Brown, and the New Blue Steel < : effe s in plain and basket weaves—All the Latest and Newest Fabrics and Colors—Glen Plaids in all variations—all tailored by the ROGERS PEET SCHLOSS BROS. recognized as Style Leaders wherever good clothes are worn—at prices that we are confident you will never see again SCHLOSS SUITS made to sell at $3000 and $3500 Sale Price, $14.75 SCHLOSS SUITS ~ made to sell at 3500 and 9000~ Sale Price, $16.85 ROGERS PEET SUITS ~ madetosellat3400 Sale Price, $31.75 $CHLOSS SUMMER SUITS e el et Sale Price, $13.85 $20.00 and $25.00 Other items in like proportions Why not investigate—it costs you nothing and i e e A S L S N i Cledinks 4 © 1933, LicGETT & MyzRs Lo THE R E-T ok S N »