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THE SUNDAY e OPTIMIST CLUBS TOCOWE HEE 700 Delegates From 115 Cities Expected at Meeting of International Unit. ! The fifteenth annual convention of | the Optimist International will be held | in Washington Thursday, Friday and | Baturday of this week when 700 dele- gates from 115 cities in the United | States and Canada are expected to as-, semble for the sessions. H Concurrent with the lnurnational? convention, the sixteenth Optimist dis- | trict, embracing Washington, Baltimore | and Richmond will hold its annual con- | vention. i The international session will be| held at the Mayflower Hotel while the | district convention will meet at the, Hamilton Hotel. Herbert B. Nevius of | ‘Washington, district governor and past president of the Washington club, will eside over the late sessions. Follow- g the initial district meeting at noon ‘Thursday, a meeting of the governors and governors-elect of Optimist Inter- national will be held at the Mayflower during the afternoon. A dinner will bhe given for the international officers in the evening after which a dance and ‘buffet supper will be held. The opening session of the interna- tional Thursday morning will be marked | by the oratorical contest for junior ‘Optimists. Officers will be elected Saturday morning. Business sessions will be held each morning. while the afternoons and evenings of the convention days will be devoted to entertainment, including sight-seeing tours, golf tournaments, dinners and dances. The convention will close Saturday with a “Night in Monte Carlo” festival. Henry Schaffert. international vice resident and a past president of the ashington club, is convention chair- man. Wash B. Williams, also a mem- ber of the Washington club, is chair- man of the Entertainment Committee. SUMMER VACATION AT “Y” IS POPULAR Special Facilities Are Offered for Swimming, Recreation and Sun Tan. “Depression vacations,” providing swimming and sun-tan without the ex- nse of a trip to the seashore, have n arranged by the Central Y. M. C. A. under a special Summer mem- bership plan that is proving exceed- ingly popular, “Y” officials said yes- terday. More than 300 Washington men al- | ready have signed up for the synthetic | holiday privileges, which feature plunges | in the improved pool and sun baths in an open-air solarium equipped with | beach cots on the roof of the “Y™ Building at Eighteenth and G streets. | Increased popularity of the vacation | membership plan is shown by a 100} per cent increase in enrollment for the three-month hot term over the same | registration period a year ago. Men ! have been signing up at the rate of | 10 8 day during the past montl. |Bank Board recommendations for the | Solarium facilities have been taxed to capacity and arrangements sre being made to provide more cots for the sun bethers. Screens have been erected to give the tan enthusiasts complete pri- vacy. The ¥. M. C. A. pool also has had capacity crowds since the instal-| Jation of a new recirculation and puri- | nl;%ions system. P e Summer membership program is under direction of John L. Vandegrift, | assistant vice president of the Chesa- | peake & Potomac Telephone Co. and chairman of Y. M. C. A. mo- tion Committee, assissted by Randolpn | E. Myers, promotion secretary. SR Y STATE DENIED CONTROL OF LOAN ASSOCIATION Receivership in Behalf of Stock- holder Outside Pennsylvania Upheld by U. 8. Court. By the Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, June 17.--Wederal Judge George A. Welsh, who has ap- pointed receivers for a building and loan association, today threw out the con- tention of the State Department cf Banking that it alone is entitled to ad- ! minister associations which are in financial difficulties. | Willlam D. Gordon, secretary of! benking, through the attorney gen- eral’s office asked Judge Welsh, in the District Court for Eastern Pennsyl- vania, to revoke the appointment of receivers for the Mortgage Building & Loan Association, Philadelphia, and turn the association over to the banking de- partment for supervision. Judge Welsh ruled that such asso- clations can have their affairs placed n equity receivership for the protec- | tion of the stockholders if they have| not already been taken over by the State and if the petitioning stockholder is| not & resident of Pennsylvania. The Federal Constitution guarantees | eitizens of another State the right of | appeal to the Federal courts. he point- | ed out. To refuse the petitioner th:s| right would be to “strip him of every vestige of his rights under the Con- stitution,” Judge Welsh ruled. Carried to its logical conclusion, such 8 theory of law “would destroy the| union of the States and make our Na- tion consist, eventually, of 48 States, bristling with antagonisms, confilcting | policies and jealousies,” he declared. Buri;dif\‘lan Posts $30 Bet to Prove He Stays in Grave| Slim Jones Finds There Are Persons Who Doubt His Veracity. from nized Bkepticism above is filtering Slim's “a voice from the grave speak- ing" too often these days is answered from the ot #Oh, yeah!—then who was that I ®ay you with last night?” Getting heated in a grave is worse than a leaky coffin, especially after you've been sealed in and under for 47 s, Slim says. a comeback Shm has posted $500 (by proxy) in & local bank as & bet that he hasn't been out of the coffiln at Bladensburg, Md. even once since they laid him to rest Slim said he was going to let his money talk for him—he's tired. But being in the grave hasn't prevented 8lim from breaking into the talkies. Despite certain technical difficulties, the sound news men “shot” Slim in his horizontal position, for the edification |Tydings Recommends Group | Owners’ Loan Corporation for Mary- | sington and Curtis Walker of Chevy Optimists Art provides the key to make a church a place of worship instead of the scene of a religious spectacle. ‘This is the belief of Prof. H. Augus- tine Smith, director of the department versity, who last night began a two-day conference on “The Fine Arts in Re- ligion” at the National City Christian Church. In a place of beauty, where a man's thoughts and emotions converge in a silent, expressive happiness—there that | man will worship, Prof. Smith believes. | “Churches must strive to create such | & place,” he said. | Famous cathedrals of Europe, West- | minster Abbey, the empty shrines along Italian roadways where the traveler | may pause to pray—all of these have a | certain stained glass atmosphere, a | blending of color, light and architecture that raise the soul to worship, even though the visitor be alone. | | Lacking in Churches. “It is this environment that is lack- |ing in many Protestant churches to- | day,” Prof.” Smith declared. “Many | Protestants shun such effects as being contrary to their religious beliefs. ! “Perhaps they fail to notice that in many of their churches worshipers have | | become mere victims of ‘spectatoritis’— | & malady that comes when the church- goer is comfortably ensconced in a pew by an usher only to listen to a sermon, be entertained by a choir and go away without having experienced the self- expression of worship. “But the musicians, the artists and | the dramatists are returning to the | chureh. It is through them that much of future progress must be ml&m “I have visited many churchef where - thel o;u‘an lpcbx! Iweretgllced upq':uzhe : | wall direct] lore the congre; n. Ubner: Benty Bohafidst of Washing® | 1y ime thnye vertical golden bars are ton, who will be conventlon chairman. | ¢ o yoteria] to be displayed. The first Lower: David W. Onan of Minne-| rcry that placed them there prob- nplolla, international president of Opti- ably did so because of del in having OFFICERS CHOSEN roll from them, not the sight of them, that can lift the soul‘to & point of worship.” Music Unites Service. Prof. Smith also pointed out that choir lofts often violate principles of art. “The choir is supposed to sing vicariously for the congregation. If that is true, they should be placed on the same level with the worshipers, not above them, where they become enter- tainers.” The Catholic church has very defi- nitely realized the spiritual value of music, the educator declared. ~The continuous mass singing is a cord that unites portions of a service of worship that might otherwise become discon- nected and jerky. s e pauiand “Many Protestants particularly op- The work of setting up an organiza- | Pose use of classic paintings in the | church, but there are many of the ob- tion to handle the details of the Home jectors, who, on Christmas day, would be happy to find the joy they could get in viewing Raphael's “Sistine Madonna™ | beautifying the stretch of buff-colored pebbledash that constitutes the walls of | the church auditorium. “A drape of colored cloth often can take away the business-like appearance of a wall in a Sunday school room— preparing a man’s emotions for thoughts | whose value is enhanced by receptivity of feeling.” All the elements of art can go into making the church the place where happiness springs from an exultant soul | state. Gothic columns have an effect | Tydings' Recommendations. all h’lkt:ed: ovn};olhz:hfilus\ch forms “(:r architecture have their place. e Mis recommendations included: | general arrangement of ‘the church Montgomery County—Maj. Phil D.|ayditorium should provide a focal point Poston of Sllver Spring, appraiser;| gt the pulpit, where the worshiper finds William H. Pace of Chevy Chase, attor- | his active attention directed and from vey, and Dr. Benjamin C. Perry of | yhich a minister may give a message | Bethesda, Richard F. Green of Ken- ¢ people whom he finds already at- | | tracted. for Maryland Body to U. S. Agency. land, an organization provided for un- der the Home Owners’ Loan act, passed at the session of Congress, just ended, was begun yesterday by Senator Millard E. Tydings of Maryland. David A. Stiefel of Baltimore and Jchn I Rowe of Catonsville were se- lected by Senator Tydings as manager and attorney, respectively, for the cor- poration, while the Maryland legislator also sent to the Federal Home Loan appointment of officers of the corjora- tion in 11 counties. Chase, committeemen. Charles County—A. Lee Hanson of Port Tobacco, appraiser; J. Reed Bailey “It is & strange thing," Prof. Smith ARTIS HELD NEED { " OF MANY CHURCHES, | Prof. H. Augustine Smith HereI for Conference at National l City Christian. | of fine arts and religion at Boston Uni- | STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JUNE 18, 1933—PART ONE. TOBACGO ACREAGE DECREASE PLANNED Wallace Announces Plan to Pay Growers for Reduction in 1933 Crop. Pleads for Art By the Associated Press Secretary of Agriculture Wallace an- nounced yesterday that tobacco growers | of New England, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Wisconsin would receive payments for | reduction in acreage of the 1933 crop. | He said also that payment in an in- creased amount was being considered | for those growers who agree to divert to non-commercial uses specified quan- tities of tobacco on hand from previous crops for each acre retired from pro- duction. ‘Wallace, in approving the plans sub- mitted by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, said the contracts to be offered covered filler and binder types, with growers agreeing that they PASTOR TO LEAVE POST would not harvest in 1933 more than | i h | 50 per cent of the acreage harvested Silver Spring Cleric to Quit Churc Il s i e D(} of Ascension. the annual average acreage harvested Special Dispatch to The Star. in 1931 and 1932. | Signers also must agree not to sell SILVER SPRING, Md, June 17—, give away any surplus plants, or to Rev. Alfred Cheetham, vicar of the!rent unneeded sheds or barns to others Church of Ascension, will relinquish his | for curing tobacco crops. | | Different plans are being worked out | charge July 1, it was learned here today. | >0t m‘%bm“ ‘mgw | Services after that date will be held | or" the Connecticut Valley and the by supplies, until & new vicar can be | Florida-Georgia areas. These plans pro- secured, it was announced by the mis- | vide for production control through the sion board of the Diocese of Washing- | formation of dealers and packers as- ton. Rev. Cheetham has been rector | sociations, establishment of standard here for the past four years. des, and uniform sales practices. | PROF. H. AUGUSTINE SMITH. FATE OF 0170 SEEN [NBERLIN PARLEY Premier Gomboes of Hunuary; Confers With Hitler—Re- : sult Unannounced. Going to China COL. RIXEY TO HEAD PEIPING GUARD. By the Associated Press. BERLIN, June 17.—Archduke Otto of Hapsburg's chances of ascending th:‘ Austro-Hungarian twin throne of his | forefathers were subjected today to the crucible of mid-European polities in & meeting between Chancellor Hitler of | Germany and Premier Gomboes of Hungary, but the result was un- announced. | ‘The Nazi party's foreign political de- ' | partment issued a communique on the | meeting which said: “General economic |and political questions were discussed |* * * The meeting closed with hearty | assurances that each state viewed the | other with greatest sympathy.” COL. PRESLEY M. RIXEY, JR., 8. M. C, now on duty in the train- Entertained at Berlin. ing section of Marine Corp headquar-| The Hungarian premier was feted by ters at the Navy Department, will soon Dr. Alfred Rosenberg, head of the for- be on his way to China to become com- |eign division of the Nazi party, and manding officer of the Marine detach- |close associates, including Theodore ment, American legation guard, at Pei- | Habicht, former German lviser to the ping. He lives at 1746 K street; is the | Austrian Nazi party, who returned here | nephew of Admiral Presley M. Rixey, |after being jailed for a day early this | U. 8. N.. retired, one-time surgeon gen- Ww‘l](i eilfllmcionnecuon with raids on Nazis i he Navy, and has two sons in | in 3 | :)l;x ‘s’grtvice. Fx’r’u Lieut. Presley M. Later Gomboes attended a reichswehr Rixey. 3d, now serving with the 4th|(army) concert of 800 pieces as guest hanghat, | Chancellor Hitler. | Regiment o s o™ Rivey “just | Almost simultaneously Chancellor | named by President Roosevelt as a mid- | Dollfuss of Austria alighted in a plane .lhlpmanylo the Naval Academy. Col.|at Vienna from London and was Rixey expects to leave Washington | greeted by the British and French min- around July 1, reaching Peiping early | isters. Whether this diplomatic gesture in August. —Harris-Ewing Photo. ' was calculated to indicate to opponents ¥ B3 Qrest Britain and France viewed the mid-] imbroglio could not be ascertained, but it may be observed in the light of re- newed efforts to secure Otto’s place on the throne and to offset the spread of Pascism. Used Hitler's Plane. Gomboes arrived here in Chancellor Hitler's private alrplane. In a recent interview, the Magyar premier flatly refused to concede Otto any chance of coming to the throne. of the decision made, today's meeting is bound to play a major role in con- temporary mid-European history. Gomboes said the reason he came to Berlin at this time was that the Hun- garian harvest begins June 28 and, as he is a practical man, he must try to find an outlet wherever he can, and therefore he came to Germany and talked to Hitler. He said he regarded looking after the material needs of his people as more important than thrones apd the restoration of kings. ONE DEAD, 11 INJURED IN SKIDDING OF CARS By the Associated Press. NEWARK, N. J, June 17.—One man | was killed and 11 persons were injured in a collision involving a bus, a truck and five automoblies near Ellmabeth late today. ‘The accident, police said, occurred when the driver of one of the passen- ger cars applied his breaks suddenly during a brief but severe rainstorm. | The car skidded and the others became involved, one after the other. The bus was carrying members of the Atlantic City Elks to the State convention here. Edward Luke. sr, of Bayonne, most severely injured, died in a hospital of a fractured skull and other His wife, & son, s daughter and her husband were taken to same hos- pital with injuries. $26,000 worth of BRAND-NEW Floor Sample, Storage & Traded-in FURNITURE to be Sacrificed! What a TIMELY event . . . just when prices are going up by leaps and bounds we are forced to offer our complete stock of furniture at the LOWEST PRICES EVER. We are listing below only a few of the bargains on sale. When this stock is sold there will never again (we believe) be offered such tre- mendous savings in furniture. Be wise . . . be on hand early! Sale Starts Tomorrow Promptly at 8 A.M. appointed iron-bound, moist- | n of Sliim Jones, much to | Hurricanes by Three or Four Days. of La Plata, attorney, and James P. Ryon of Waldorf, Samuel C. Linton of | Riverside and Harry C. Chaptelar of H\gl:efl'flle, committeemen. derick County—James H. Creamer of Frederick, appraiser; H. Kieffer de Lauter of Prederick, attorney, and Wil- | liam M. Storm of Prederick, F. Ross | Myers of Frederick and Ernest Helfen- | stein, jr., of Frederick, committeemen. | Calvert County—J. Daniel Lyons, ap- praiser; John B. Gray & Son of Prince Frederick, attorney; Robert S. Mead of North Beach, George B. Turner of Prince Frederick and Harry B. Truman of Appeal, committeemen. Others Recommended. Senator Tydings also announced his | recommendations for similar appoint- | ments in Baltimore, Allegany, Cecil, Garrett, Harford, Wicomico and Wor- cester Counties, and made it known that he would follow this with recom- mendations for appointments in the re- maining 12 counties of the State within the next few days. Under the bill an appraiser, an at- torney and an advisory board will be named for each county. The appoint- ment of these officials will be made by | the Federal Home Loan Bank Board upon the indorsement of State political | leaders. Formal announcement of their selection is expected within a few days and the organization in the counties will be set up at once. ‘ . TRUCKS SEEK AID Move ta Be;;m VUVI;deVr U. 8. Re- covery Act. NEW YORK, June 17 (#).—Organi- zation of a natioval federation of State motor truck associations so that the trugking business may come under the natlonal recovery law was proposed by representatives of nine State associa- tions yesterday. W. A d of Harrisburg. Pa., rman of a committee to e tion, said the “quickest y to perfect” the organizat be to group existing State bodies. Formation of the r d Sutherland, would provide the ickers with a medium for appear- ances before Federa' -fficials in devis- ing a fair trade code nal association B the Associated Press NEW ORLEANS, June 17—Based on his half & century's experience as a forecaster, Dr. Isaac M. Cline, principal | meteorologist of the United States Weather Bureau here, has drawn up a comprehensive list of the eccentricities of tropical disturbances The right-hand side of a storm is more dangerous, waves precede hurri- canes by three or four days and loss of life from high winds is usually caused { by drowning. These are only & few of the many peculiarities he has observed during his ©f cinemagoers. Dog Sensitive to Sound. long period of service. “There is on the right-hand side of the storm—the more dangerous side— air stream which has velocities of [ Attention Varies. 'RIGHT SIDE OF TROPICAL STORM IS DECLARED MOST DANGEROUS| Veteran New Orleans Meteorologist Says Waves Precede sald, “to note the difference when a minister talks ‘down’ to his congrega- tion and when he talks ‘up’ to them. If he feels that his audience is below him, in thought and receptivity, as vell as location, and speaks accord- imgly, their attention wanders to the chandeliers or perhaps the choir lcad- er. But if he speaks as though they were above him, the psychological effect 0‘!‘ their increasing attention is star- tling.” Prof. Smith is not a minister. He is distinctly an educator and began in 1916 his lecture work throughout the country, as a representative of Boston University, to point out the heightening effects that can be obtained by use of the fine arts in religion. Last night he spoke at a banquet, which opened his canference on “The PFine Arts as Redemptive Forces.” Later in the evening a hymnic sing was held and he spoke an “Lyric Religion.” This morning he will talk on “The Singing Church” at the 11 a.m. service of the National City Christian Church; again at 4:30 pm. on “The Renaissance of Church Music”; at 6:30 pm. on “The ‘Twilight Temple of Religious Art,” and at the 8 o'clock service on “The Fes- tival of Music and Pictures.” NOTED FRENCH LAWYERS WILL DEFEND GERMANS Join Defense Counsel in Trial of Communists Accused of Firing Reichstag Building. By the Associated Press PARIS, June 17.—Two leading crimi- nal lawyers of Paris, Cesar Campinchi and Vincent de Moro-Giaferri, agreed today to assist in the defense of Ernest Torgler and other German Communists accused of burning the German Reichs- tag Building, 1f the Leipzig court per- mits. A committee of Germans preparing the defense said the defendants would ed only the attorneys the court d. but they Shoped that for- nsel would be accepted. A tiird lawyer, Henry Torres, also may go to assist at the Leipzig trial Moro-Giaferri became widely known when he defended the notorious French ““Bluebeard,” Landru which are not developed in other plnsl of the cyclones,” he said H “These swells travel forward with a velocity of from 40 to 60 miles an hour, and reach the coast, toward which the right front of the cyclone is advancing, three or four days before arrival of the hurricane. “The storm tides are the first indica- tious that a tropical disturbance is ap- proaching any particular locality.” Such storms take their greatest toll of human life in the coastal lowlands, when residents fail to flee at the first approach of the disturbance, he said. The velocity of winds in a hurricane vary from 75 to 150 miles an hour, while the storm itself moves only at a rab; of from 10 to 15 miles an hour, he said. The forecaster sald the disturbances | are more pronounced from August to an Probably the most sensitive of all 30 to 150 miles an hour, developing | October, but also occur frequently dur- great waves and sending out long swells | ing June and July. #aimals to sound is the dog. s o .pc. Velour Suite. Regularly $49.50. From Storage. Now 3.pc. Jacquard Living Room Suite. Regularly $69.50. Traded-in. Now. .. 3.Pc. Velour Living Room Suite. Regularly $78.50. Traded-in. Now Gorgeous 3-pc. 2-tone Suite. Regularly $95.00. Unclaimed. Now 3.pc. Tapestry Bow-front Suite. Regularly $119.50. Unclaimed. Now Beautiful French Velour 3-pc. Suite. Regularly $138. Traded-in. Now. Genuine Mohair 3-pc. Suite. Regularly $149. A-1 Condition. Now 2 and 3 pc. Tapestry Suites. Brand-New. Reg. $98 to $125. Now Two Fine Separate Mohair Settees From Hotel Lobby $99S New Separate Davenport. 75 Rezularlyp $69.00. Now . $22 3595 5995 127 $1 650 51 795 $2 475 28" $3 975 3-pc. Velour Davenport Suite. § 775 Regularly $79.50. Storage. Now 2-tone 3-pc. Davenport Suite. § 1 295 Regularly $98.50. Reclaimed. Now Long 3-tone Bed Davenport § 50 3.pc. Suite Traded-in Brand-New 2 and 3 pc. Dav- $4875 enport Suites-.............., 3-pc. Reed Fiber Suite. $785 Regularly $22.50. Now. 2.pc. Reed Fiber Suite. i Floor Sample .. 2.pc. Damask Living Room Suite. 3 3 50 Floor Sample.... 4 Formerly $135. !MISCELLA EOUSI Davenport Tables. $169 Regularly $7.50. Samples. Now..... S-pc. Unfinished Breakfast 3298 SOite ;. c.ineis $775 S-pc. Green Enamel Breakfast Suite. Regularly $19.50. Now 5-pc. Oak Breakfast Suite. Hundreds of Other Items Not Listed Regularly $16.50. Now.............. “One Lot of Vanity 3.pc. Walnut Veneer Suite. Large chifforobe, full vanity $1 495 and bed Storage. Formerly §59.50 3-pc. Walnut finish Bedroom $1 850 Suite.Formerly $§42.50. Mismatched $ 50 24 4-pc. Walnut Bedroom Suites. $3 985 Formerly $59.50. Sample. ... High-lighted 4-pc. Venetian Bedroom Suite. $ 50 08 $ 50 54 $ 85 69 New and perfect. Regularly $89.50. Grand Rapids Walnut Bed- $298 3298 room Suite, 6 pieces. New and perfect. Formerly $300. .. $ 495 5395 Brand-New 4-pc. Burl Walnut Bed Room Suite ............ $ 450 $ 1 00 Twin Walnut Bed Room Suite. New. Regularly $175.00. Now.. Oak Dressers— From storage as low as............. Oak Chiffoniers— As low as Walnut Finish Chifforobe. Regularly $19.50. Storage. Now...... Semi-Vanity Dresser. Regularly $12.50. Now.............. Walnut 4-Drawer Chiffoniers. Regularly $8.75. New Samples. Now. . Benches Some Used Fine Walnut Chifforobe. Regularly $24.50. Used. Now.. BEDS ANDBEDDING 14 Fine Wood Beds, in walnut or mahogany. Regularly $10 to $20. Now.......... One Lot of Used Bed Springs. All Sizes Capitol Brand Felt Mattresses. Regularly $7.50. New............... Fine 10-yr. Guar’d Coil Springs. $445 Regularly $9.50. Now... .... Now...... “Heller” Inner Coil Mattresses.. $775 Guaranteed. Reg. $17.50. Double Day Beds. 5695 Regularly 518 to $24.50. Now..... Studio Couches. $ 1 295 Regularly $39.50. Floor Sample. Now NO CHARGES—ALL SALES FINAL Fumed Oak 10-pc. Dining Room Suite, Excellent Condition. Regularly $125. Traded-in. Now.. Queen Anne 10-pc. Dining Room Suite. Regularly $95.00. Storage. Now. ... Mahogany 8-pc. Dining Room Suite. Regularly $12500. Now.. One Lot of Odd Oak Dining - 31 585 $2250 50c One Lot of Fine Oak 50 Buffets .......o...ce06 e s2 Oak China Closet (glass broken). 5250 Regularly 329.50. Now.............. Oak Extension Dining Tables. 3250 Regularly $19.50. Now...........,... 10-pc. Walnut Dining Room Sum, Regularly $84.50. Now. .. $3 375 Beautiful 9-pc. Walnut Din. - ing Room Suite. $ 4850 Regularly $128.50, Now.......... Squ lglpchtll*‘u:; Shex:ito&\ Dining Room uites. Slightly-dam: , floor samples. Ruu);crly $144.50. Now s698s VO s - wiowiis s 0 Perfect 6x9 Felt Base Regularly $16.50. Now.............. Green Reed BabyyCarriage. 5895 Odd Rockers and § CORINE: oo s vtin s Bmsain o $195 Shades . iiiiiiers sy 1 One Lot of Unfinished Kitchen 49 C $169 LT s B F R R 1 9x12 Tapestry Rug. $450 9x12 Axminster Rug. Regularly 33‘5.M. Nouf. [ 5950 Regularly $20 to $30. Now..... A Deposit Holds Any Item 30 Days Reed Fiber Stroller, with Hood § 498 Regularly $24.50. Now .. $198 One Lot of Lamps and Chairs .... % 5149 Regularly $19.50. Now...... Finest New Lounge Chairs. 3975 Exchange Furniture Store, 829 Seventh St. N.W.