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Any business mes- sage worth writing is important enough to justify stationery designed and en- graved by Brewood. Phone today for samples and prices. ‘BREW@D Engravers and Printers 611 Twelfth Street Phone Dist. 4868 MAYTAG WASHER Square, one- piece cast alu- minum tub that will not chip, dent or rust. Lifetime, oil- in: Flexible upper and firm low- er rolls evenly buttons. WEEKLY ARING. Sales and Service 517 10th N.W. NA. 2160 To Relieve g RUPTURE IS SERIOUS. A TRUSS THAT DO me show you something inconceivably different, so light. neat and comfortable that you will be amazed. Get away from flimsy, short-lived elastic belts that never stay in place, hard plug pads that break down muscle tissue. ansightly ham-like cushions that wili fill the entire groin, impeding walking, Le DON'T WEAR 'T HOLD. Let ! B BE_MOD “WHY BE i THOM COME_IN AND LET ME PROVI THIS TO YOU FREE OF CHARGE THEN_DECIDE. Run. jump, stoop of lift.” You cannot throw your rupture out. It's no guess. Thonsands of de- lighted users now know thi sults are reported. DON'T LOSI OR SAY, “IT’t USE.” Here at your ation. Just ask the Watson. at the Har- ashington, Monday, October 11, and Tuesday. Oetober 15. from 10 to 12 AM. and 1 to 5 and . < Tired.. Nervous sl Wife Wins Back i 4 (. tired” feeling. Won | new youthful color—restful nights, active da; —all because she rid her system of powel S | §ing wastcs that were sapping her vitality. NR | ablets (Nature's Remedy)—the mild, safe, all-vegetable laxative—worked the transforma- tion. Try it for constipation, biliousness, head- aches, dizzy == TO-NIGHT druggists "THIS week—at your drogeits—Deau- —atyour, 3 E (RS Color 1635 Toah Chlendar Faes hase of a 25¢ box of NR or & mometer with the purc 10¢ roll of Tums (For Acid Indigestion.) | tary of this unit. JOAN CRAWFORD AND TONE MARRY Film Couple Slips Away to New Jersey Town for Secret Ceremony. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 14.—Fran- chot Tone wooed and won Joan Craw- ford in real life just as he did be- fore the movie cameras of Hollywood. Mayor Herbert Jenkins of Engle- wood Cliffs, N. J., disclosed last night he married the two film stars Friday. It was a simple ceremony, he said. In a New York hotel, Tone con- firmed his marriage and said Nicho- las Schenck, movie executivg, was one of the few witnesses to the cere- mony. To Return to Hollywood. “We'll stay here for about 10 days more and then go back to Hollywood for a while,” the bridegroom added. For two years Tone has played suitor to Miss Crawford, both off and on the screen, since she obtained a divorce from Douglas Fairbanks, jr. Friends of the couple frequently re- ported their intention to wed. The two film stars motored to the New Jersey town Friday morning, Mayor Jenkins said, and were mar- ried at 10 am. Miss Crawford wore 8 blue sports ensemble and Tone a business suit. The bridegroom gave his wife a wedding ring of emeralds and dia- monds at the close of the ceremony, Jenkins reported. ‘Tone’s Parents Pleased. The mayor declined to tell where they obtained their wedding license, New Jersey law requires that a cere- mony cannot be performed until three days after the license is granted. On the application for the license, Miss Crawford gave her age as 26 and Tone said he was 30. The bridegroom’s mother, Mrs. F. L. Tone of Niagara Falls, N. Y., said she and her husband are “very pleased with our son's choice, and I know they will be an extremely happy couple.” ‘Tone went to Hollywood after Miss Crawford had established herself in the films. He previously had ap- peared in New York Theater Guild | productions. Miss Crawford was fore merly a New York City stage dancer under the name of Lucille La Seuer. HAMILTON TO HEAD CHEST CAPITAL UNIT Maj. Johnson Again to Be Sec- retary of Group for Fall Campaign. West A. Hamilton, Col. colored cepted the chairmanship of the Com- munity Chest, Capital Unit, for the Fall campaign this year. Announce- and acceptance has been made by Dr. William McClellan, Community Chest campaign chairman. Col. Hamilton has been identified with the Community Chest practically since its inception here. He has held numerous posts among its officials and has been extremely active in all cam- paigns. His appointment is bélieved to augur well for an auspicious show- ing in the Capital Unit this year. Maj. Campbell C. Johnson, secretary of the Twelfth Street branch of the Y. W. C. A, will again act as secre- Maj. Johnson has had wide experience in social work and has served on all past Chest campaigns. Col. Hamilton pointed out yesterday | that the Capital Unit, while handling the solicitation among the colored residents of the city, does not obtain credit for the full giving power of Washington’s colored citizens, This is due to the fact that many of them give through Government or group solicitation units, because of their employment, Both Col. Hamilton and Maj. John- son have started organiaztion work ggm':lewunig lng hope to have plans e ove T iy y ember 1 at the —_— 90,000,000-YEAR-OLD SKULL IS DISCOVERED Wyoming Deposits Yield Bones of Catlike Flesh-Eating Ani- mal—Rare Find. By the Associated Press. PRINCETON, N. J., October 14.— " | Discovery of the complete skull of & imitive carnivore, flesh-eating ani mal about the size of a cat whick lived approximately 90,000,000 years ago. has been e2nnounced by Dr. Glenn L. Jepsen of the Princeton depart- ment of geology. Dr. Jepsen, who led the 1935. Scott Fund Expedition, said the skull was found in the Big Horn Basin of Wyo- ming, 25 miles northeast of Cody. It is believed to be the only complete skull of its kind ever found. REAL ESTATE LOANS now being made on terms as low as Perpetual offers a new and attractive mortgage loan . a reduction of 25% Actually lower than paying renewal fees, it's the— BUILDING A 11th and E BISHOP ARTHUR G. Chairman of the Board M 3 '25:: of Federal ’Hofll Loan ’lufl' "he District of C( For funds to purchase a home home improvements or %o refinance existing trusts PERPETUAL on monthly repayments. rent. No commission or « o o to make desired SSOCIATION Sts. N. W. Th est in Washington—Assets over $36,000,000 s i !lflg“lm 1881 STTS mm;wm EDWARD C. BALTZ, Secretary nited States Building and b”f-"’n&w and Loon Lesgus. publisher and civic worker, has ac- | ment of Col. Hamilton's appointment | THE EVEX Film Lovers JOAN CRAWFORD. Wed Secretly FRANCHOT TONE. WOMEN OPEN FIGHT ON SPOILS SYSTEM Voters League President Declares Patronage Most Important Issue Facing U. S. By the Associated Press. ‘The League of Women Voters yes- terday got out its one and only 1936 campaign handbook—an attack on the spoils system. “The most important fssue in our country today on a long-run basis,” Miss Marguerite Wells, league presi- dent, called it. “Long ago we learned how easily everything we tried to do was frustrated by faulty administra- tion after we got laws passed.” Miss Wells said the league’s 1936 campaign, which includes pledge cards, was aimed at the fundamental psychology of the American mind, AFTER SMOKING ACAMEL, | GET A FEELING OF NEW ENERGY AND WELL-BEING. AND & CAMELS NEVER TIRE MY TASTE ROSCOE TURNER—Speed Flyer tenaciously clinging to the old pioneer tradition of patronage. “We discovered that public opinion was unconsciously so acquiescent in the patronage system that we have to begin right back attacking the minds of our citizens on the subject,” she said. “It isn't that they say ‘all right' to patronage. They just take it for granted. If you ask mothers whether or not they would choose a career of public service for their sons or daugh- | ters, in nine cases out of ten they will say, ‘we haven't any pull’ “We can’t have our gigantic admin- istration system made up of people who have to have pull.” Guild to Hold Supper. FAIRLAND, Md., October 14 (Spe- cial) —St. Mark’s Guild will hold an | be presented following the supper. EXPERIENCE, | oyster and ham supper at St. Mark’s | | parish hall on October 25 at 5:30 | |pm. A “Tom Thumb” wedding will | FRIENDSHIP HOUSE WILL HAVE BAZAAR Oriental Items to Be Featured in Event Set for Next Thursday. One of the big events on the Fall and Winter program at Friendship House, 324 Virginia avenue southeast, will be the oriental bazaar to be held next Thursday afternoon and evening from 4 to 6 o'clock and from 8 to 10 o'clock. The bazaar will feature ex- hibits of oriental art and sales of some unusual imported articles. Among the exhibits will be a num- ber of articles from Korea, lent by Miss Ruth McGowan; an exhibit from China, with a talk by Mrs. Arthur Hummel. Mrs. George Jameson will also give a talk on Japan. Imported linens, jewelry and other masterpieces of oriental craft will be on sale at reasonable prices. They are expected to attract early Christ- mas shoppers. The Girl Scout Troop of Friendship House will have a booth selling jellies, homemade cakes, cookies and candies. The woodcarving class will have an exhibit of articles such as buttons and Caulk-0-Seal A non-staining waterproof Plastic Compound for Caulking, Glazing and ply—not cold. Can be Price of Gun; $1.00 Butler-Flynn 609 C St. N.W. Met. 0151 FROM YEARS OF KNOW THAT SMOKING A CAMEL GIVES MY ENERGY A 'LIFT/ AND CAMELS NEVER INTERFERE WITH HEALTHY NERVES PHYSICAL INSTRUCTOR=Chacles A c% fi é is COSTLIER TOBACCOS el s s NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING IS “POINT- OF-SHOPPING” ADVERTISING A { @ Newspaper advertising creates buying action. It is local. It is sought. It is read at the time the prospect is actively planning to buy! 2 STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1933, dress ornaments, while the dancing classes will give several programs of Oriental dances. . One booth will be devoted to the telling of fortunes, while Frederick J. Haskin, jr, and Mrs. Louise Haskin, talented Washington dancers, will give several Hindu dance numbers. The members of the Mothers’ Club will serve refreshments. Noted Educator Dies. ST. BONIFACE, Manitoba, October 14 (#).—Brother Joseph Henry Fink, principal of St. Boniface Collegiate here and prominent educator, died yesterday, aged 61 years. A native of Bavaria, Germany, Brother Joseph went to Pittsburgh with his parents when a boy. HIGH INFANT MORTALITY| SEEN IN RISING PRICES| California Doctor Says Food Be- ing Denied Expectant Mothers by Cost Increases. By the Associated Press. LOS ANGELES, October 14.—Dr. E. Dwight Smith of Glendale, Calif, believes “Federal administration poli- cles in raising food costs and not reducing unemployment have tended to increase the infant mortality rate.” “We have the spectacle of our Gov- ernment spending millions to control | production of wheat, meat and even milk in order to raise prices,” he told | the Southwestern Homeopathic Medi cal Society. “This means that still more people cannot buy these neces- sities and many expectant mothers, nursing mothers, and children must go underfed.” Salesmen Wanted —to acquaint themselves with the adv: s of The Short Line bu, Inquire at or phone 609 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. SPECIAL VALUES STORE ADDRESSES 9th & F Sts. N. 13th & H Sts. 14th & Pa. Ave. Headquarters for VITRMIN PRODULTS 18th & Col. Rd. N. 14th & Col. Rd. 1ith & Pa. Ave. N.W. 14th & H Sts. N. 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