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Also New Fast Express Service tos THE EVEN Sietor seog m ANNAPOLIS HOTEL 2rara: Ask about substantial savings on round trips. NEW YORK °*8:= Trip NEW FAST THROUGH EXPRESSES—NO CHANGES Ind’apolis 13.00 Rochester 11.20 L. Angeles 3 Providence 8y 1 Boston___ 9,00 St. Louis. 11.00 Columbus 10.! R Atlanta Store Hours—9 to 6; Saturdays, 9 to 2 Fashion Park Suits Reduced! The Nation’s Finest Clothing at Louwest Prices of the Year Every $40 and $45 Suit $26.75 Every $50, $55 and $60 Suit $34.75 Blue Suits and Evening Clothes Excepted No Charge for Alterations Special Overcoat Sale Brand-new, smart 1935 models. Chesterfields, Town Coats and Raglans. $35 and $40 values— $728.50 Glenbrook Tropical Worsted Suits 314.75 Were $20 to Imported Linen Suits_ ... ___ $10.75 Were $15 and $16.50. All Stiff Straws Including new Golfer Soft Straw. $2.50 to $5. 5 Panamas . ... 7V2 and 7% only. Were $7.50 and $10. $2 and $2.50 Shirts Fancy, attached and separate collar: $3 and $3.50 Shirts Fine Madras etc., attached and separate collars. Mode Glenbrook Shirts ; Our famous Broadcloth Shirts. shades and white with collar attached; 3 for $4.50 neckband in white only. o All 75¢ and $1 Neckwear____.. 49(: 3 for $1.25 ceeee 19c 3 for $2.25 $1.29 3 lo.-lss.so $1.75 and $2 Pajamas...._.. - 3 for $4 $2.50, $3, $3.50 and $4 Pajamas $l-89 Silk and linen, madras and soisette— regular and feather weight. 35¢ and 50c Hose. Pastel and dark shades. 75¢ French-back Shorts and Shirts. Each_..___._.___. $1.50 Rockinchair Union Suits._ . The $2 grade, now $1.50. 50c B. V. D. Shorts:and Shirts. Each - 2 $l.00 Were 3 for $5.50 All $1.50 Neckwear All $2, $2.50 and $3 Neclmfear 3 for $5.50 29¢ 4 for $1 45¢ 31.10 39¢ Clearance Whitehall Shoes Sport Shaes, and regular black and 34 45 tan calf Oxfoids. Values up to $8.50._ - $5.85 and $7.85 You can be fitted in one style or another. $10 Foot Saver Shoes $7 to $9 Whitehall Shoes J Free Parking While Shopping Here — ‘Washington Garage, 12th and E Streets. Open a Charge Account. Monthly Settlements—or Our Convenient 12-Paymeft Pl:n. The Mode—TF at Eleventh W.P. A WILL FILM RECORD OF DRIVE Unemployed Cameramen .to Put Story of Works Re- lief on Film, By the Associated Press. Having as its aim the creation of jobs for unemployed movie camera- men and making an histerical record | of the works drive, & “motion picture | rgcord” division has been set up in Harry L. Hopkins' Works Progress Administration. Something like 200,000 feet of film | may be used in making a cellulmd; record of the $4,800,000,000 program | intended to substitute 3,500,000 jobs for the dole. As to possible use of the pictures in next year's national campaign, Syd- ney Mackean, director of the division, said no plans for distribution have been made. He added: “The film will be Government prop- erty. We can’t stop & Young Demo- | cratic club from asking for it, but | the Young Republican clubs, and even the Young Communist clubs, will have the same right.” Three cameramen already are at | work and Mackean hopes eventually to have a staff of five. The first “shots” were taken two weeks ago, when 5.000 men began work on Ala- bama projects. “We intend to produce a factual| story in pictures,” MacKean said. | “There will be a definite continuity, and ‘before’ and ‘after’ scenes will be taken as well as those of men actually at work. We hope to make it as vivid | a portrayal of the works drive as the | one of the World War produced by the | Signal Corps.” | Cameras and other equipment are | being supplied by the cameramen | themselves or borrowed from news G _STAR, WASHINGTON, which nearly 5,000,000 sheep perished, ' plague, has been broken by heavy rain. reel companies. The only cost to the | Government, MagKean said, will be salaries and film. In return for loans of their equip- ment, the news reel concerns will be permitted to borrow choice “shots” | taken by the relief camera men. Scund equipment will not be used, MacKean | cxplaining that no speechmaking will | be filmed, and that “the noise made | by a pick or a shovel wouldn't add much.” MacKean, who said he had 18 years of experience with news reel com- panies, said the length of the W. P. A, picture has not been determined. | _—_——— | Bee's Sting Kills Girl. | PROVO, Utah, August 14 (#).—A bee's sting killed Miss Eliza Keetch, 22-year-old Brigham Young Univer- | sity co-ed, yesterday. | Fifteen minutes after she was stung | | —while in the lunch room at the Uni: versity Summer school in the Wa. satch Mountains—the girl died. . District of Cclumbia—Partly cloudy, probably occasional showers tonight and tomorrow; not quite so warm to- night; gentle variable winds. | Maryland—Partly cloudy, probably | | occasional showers tonight and tomor- | | row; not quit sowarm tonight; slowly | rising temperature in west portion to- | morrow. | | Virginia—Probably occasional show- | ers tonight and tomorrow; not quite | s0 warm in northeast portion tonight; | | rising temperature in extreme west | | portion tomorrow. | West Virginia—Partly cloudy, prob- | ably showers tonight and tomorrow: | slowly rising temperature tomorrow. _River Report. Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers | muddy today Report for Last 23 Hours. (4pm.__ | 8 pm Midnight Record for Last 21 Hours. | (Prom nonn vesterday to noon today) | Highest. 98, 4:30 p.m. vesterday. Year | ago. 2 | Lowest, 72, 6 a.m. today. Yéar ago, 71. Record Temperatures This Year. Highest. 98 on July 20. west —. on January 28. Humidisy for Last 21 Hours. (Prom noon yesterday to noon today.) Highest, 91 per cent, at 5:30 a.m. to- ay. Lowest, 40 per cent, at 3:45 pm. ves- terday. Tide Tables. (Purnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) Today. | High Low High Low The Sun and Moon. Rises. Sun, today_ Sun. tomorre ) : Moon, today. am. 5 Automobile Tights must be turned on one- half hour after sunset. Precipitation. Monthly precipitation in inches in the th to date): Weather in Various Cities. mTemperature. H ] 002 Cloudy 0.06 Cloudy Cloud: s Derver, Colo. Detroil. Mich: FOREIGN. (7 a.m.. Greenwicn time. tods Londo! Paris. ienn. Berlin. German Zurich, Switzeriand Stockholm. Sweden . Senator Invited to Outing The Young Democrats Club of Capitol Hill prepares for its last public Photo shcws Senator Smith of South Carolina receiving the first ticket for 2 boat ride Miss Lena Belle High of Senator Smith's State gathering before merging with other Young Democrats. to be held August 20. presents the ticket, while Miss Jane Oyster of Maryland looks on —Star Staff Photo, Long Drought Ended. The long drought in Queensland, in Plagued by Mosquitoes. Siberian plains humans. ATTENTION! New York Voters In order to vote in the coming November elections in New York it is necessary to register in person. Central registration will be held during the entire month of August. A SPECIAL EXCURSION is being planned to New York City, leaving Washington Friday, August 16, at 5:55 P.M., returning on any train up te 12:30 A.M. Monday morning, August 19. SPECIAL ROUND TRIP RATE, $7.00 An acditional train will leave at 12:30 AM. Saturday morning, August 17, to accommodate those unable to leave at 5:55 P.M. Friday. SPECIAL RATES IN THE DINING CAR Tickets for the excursion on sale at Absentee Voters’ Bureau, Grid- iron Room, Willard Hotel. All information relative to registering, absentee voting and the excursion can be obtained at the Absentee Voters' Bureau. Open 8 AM. to 9 P.M., excepting Sundays. National 4420. District 3206. All eligible New York voters are urged to register and take advan- tage of the excursion. MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW! GOING TO STOP AT THIS SIGN OF GREATER VALUES! Last yeara il bedroom —now a home of her own How a lonely NINE OCLOCK AND DICK BROWN DIDN'T have a mosquito clouds of insects attacking D. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1935, — e PAVING IS PLANNED ON EASTERN AVENUE Stretch West of Bladensburg Road Scheduled to Be Finished in October. District engineers todey are com- pleting plans for paving of a stretch of Eastern avenue, west of Bladens- burg road northeast, near the old en- trance to Jimmy La Fontaine’s place. The entire project is scheduled to be | finished during October. Construction | of a viaduct over the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad on the line of Eastern | avenue now is 80 per cent completed. | The Commissioners yesterday ; awarded a contract for grading of ap- | proaches to the viaduct to the Capital Excavating Co. for $5,860. Bids are to be opened this week for paving the avenue from Bladensburg road to Rhode Island avenue, | ‘The work is financed out of an ap- | propriation of $130,000 for the viaduct and the road improvements, Dog ‘Answers Telephone. Dixi, an Alsatian wolfhound, aged 6, has been trained as the perfect com- paniongfor the deaf and dumb. His owner, Herr Johannes Hull of Berlin, has taught Dixi to obey signs made with the fingers, wake his master when the alarm clock rings, guide him to the front door and answer the telephone. When the phone rings the dog takes the receiver off and runs barking loudly to attract the attention of the master. The telephone can be sufficiently amplified for use by a deaf man. " Dontt be s KN 1t Resinol Act Quickly Clearance of Stoves Famous Garland Ranges Cowyak Milk Richer. Tests made with the progeny of & yak bull and dairy cows, which have been successfully eross-bred at Irk- utsk, ‘Russia, show that the females vield considerably more and richer milk than ordinary cows. The yak is a near relative of the European ox. It is used to supply milk and as & beast of burden in Central Asia. \ SINGLE ROOM/AND PRIVATE BATH A new hotel on 42nd Stzeet 2 blocks east of Grand Central Station HOTEL TUDOR NEW YORKX CITY As little as Day Act Quickly All Must Go 2—Regular Price, $89.50—SALE ......$54.50 S5—Regular Price, 99.50—SALE 64.50 69.50 79.50 All Installed and Delivered At Above Prices ARTHUR JORDAN PIANO COMPANY 1239.6 Street ~ Cor.13% NW. Home of Mason & Hamlin and Chickering Pianos - o VLL SAY 1T WAS! AND FROM NOW ON, JUST TRY TO AVOID OFFENDING Every young girl dreams of a happy marriage! Soremember —daintiness is irresistibly at- tractive, Don’t risk perspira- tion odor in underthings—Lux them after each wearing. Lux has no harmful alkali— saves colors. And it removes perspiration odor completely. Avoid ordinary soaps with harmful alkali and cake-soap rubbing. Anything safe in wa- ter is safe in Lux! Removes perspiration odor- saves colors 4 '