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OE HIG *INCORPORATED" J H "OUR PLUMBER/ wmnec with all the old fashioned trim- mings . . . without the endless bother of preparation . .. in the PRESIDENTIAL | DINING ROOM Service Continuous Noon to 9 p. m. $2.50 per person % The Mayflower Coffee Shoppe will also serve an all day table d'hote heliday dinner at $1.25 per person. The MAYFLOWER | HOTEL OAL Famous Pennsylvanla Anthracite w. W. W. w. Buckwheat _ POCAHONTAS Stove 10.00 Egg...10.40. Nut___ 9.00 These coals are unsurpassed in_ quality. Washed at the mine, thoroushly rescreened and priced for cash delivery. In less expensive coals we A. Ezg A, Sto' have Coke (2,000) Fairmont Egg ..- 8.50 Md. Smokeless Egg_. 8.90 Virginia Anth. Stove.. 10.00 It carried in. 50c ton extra Full Weight Guaranteed B. J. WERNER 1937 5th St. N.E. NOrth 8813 $10.50 MEDICATED WITH INGREDIENTS OF Vicks VApoRuB Modem successorta | old-fashioned cough | SYrups...more cone venient . . . less ex- | pensiv ingers longer in the throat. { | LOW-FARE FALL \ THANKSGIVING DAY, THURSDAY, NOV. 28 AND SUNDAY, DEC. 1 A Million Things to See in ONLY NEW YORK*350 R Also Newark, Plainfleld & Elizabeth ' Trip Go either day. Leave Washington, 12:01 a. m. or 8:00 a. m. RETURNING, ieave New York 5145 p. m. or Midnight same d SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 PITTSBURGH °$go0 McKeesport—Braddock Round Trip $4.00 Connellsville Leave Washington 11:59 p. m. Returning leave Sundoy night SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1 CUMBERLAND $3.00 "7} Martinsburg $2.00—Harper's Ferry $1.50 Leave Washington 8:35 a. m. Returning same day. Choice of 2 frains. NEW YORK $5.65 Each Way Every Night Philadelphia $3.40 Air-Conditioned Reclining Seat Coaches open Union Station .m. Lv.1:00 a. m. BALTIMORE $1.25 Saturdays and Sundays,Round Trip $1.50 Daily—Good for 3 days,Round Trip THANKSGIVING BARGAIN Save nearly 1 on Round Trip Tickets good leaving Wednesday, November 27, with extended return limit. Also reduced sie: ing car fores. Details from any B & O Ticket Agent or Telephone: District 3300, National 7370 BALTIMORE & OHIO R-R. Round | Tear were planning. | arations for her marriage wer SUOR T0 FACE NEW LORIG QUL Aubrey Hampton Again to Be Questioned by Itzel in Search of Clue. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., Novem- ber 27.—Another interview with Au- brey Hampton, 29, a former suitor of Corinna Loring, is planned soon by in- vestigators seeking a new clue to the murder of the 26-year-old bride-elect. Hampton, a Government clerk who lives in the 1000 block of New Hamp- shire avenue, was arrested for ques- tioning on the day after Miss Loring’s | body was found in a clump of pines | near her home at 3110 Beech street, Mount Rainier. No charge was placed against | Hampton and he was released after Lieut. Joseph Itzel interrogated him for several hours in the police station at Hyattsville. At that time, Hampton explained he had not seen Miss Loring for several | months, the last time being a glimpse | of her in company with Richard Tear, 29, an attendant at St. Elizabeth's | Hospital and Corinna’s fiance. Hamp- ton had a number of dates with the attractive public stenographer about a year ago. Lo Jacono to Be Quizzed. Lieut. Itzel's plans for today call for another talk with Leo Lo Jacono, | also an attendant at St. Elizabeth's, and brother-in-law of the slain girl, who introduced Tear to Corinna about | five months ago. Sergt. Leo Vogelsang of the Balti- more police force returned here today to assist Lieut. Itzel with the investi- gation. The two Baltimore detectives went over the 1,000-page transcript of statements in the case today pre- paratory to reinterviewing Hampton | and Lo Jacono. Washington police today continued their search for a Capital man wanted in connection with an attempted as- sault upon a young girl near the Loring home in Mount Rainier Sun- day afternoon. The man is believed | to be the same who accosted several| | other young girls of the neighl_:urfl | hood on at least four occasions since | tober 25. | Tear voluntarily came to Marlboro late yesterday to suggest to Lieut. Itzel that he be given a test for veracity with a “lie detector.” The Baltimore detective laughed oft the proposition and told Tear he “wanted no part of it.” Calls Detector “Third Degree.” Itzel said a detection method of this type is outlawed in Maryland and | classed as a form of the third degree. Late yesterday Lieut. Itzel revisited | the Loring home to discuss the case | briefly with Corinna’s mother, Mu.{ Frances ‘Loring, and to go over the| girl's effects stored there. ! The bride-elect had collected a com- | plete trousseau, which she had care- fully stowed away in an unusually large cedar hope chest. Corinna nlso; had bought and paid cash for & suite of bed room furniture and other | household goods with which she ex- pected to furnish the home she and | | | | | Lieut. Itzel examined the articles| without finding any new clue on which | to work. The Baltimore detective said the wrapping cord about a num- ber of Corinna’s bundles was not| similar to the twine used by the murderer who strangled the girl. Included among the articles in the | hope chest were a number of large | and intricate rag rugs which Corinna had fashioned with her own hands for her home. Made Rugs of Stocking Silk. ‘The girl had made several of the rugs from bits of silk taken from her discarded stockings. Corinna's prep- re- garded as an important clue to her character. They demonstrated to in- | vestigators that she had worked en- | thusiastically and whole-heartedly to | make her approaching marriage a | success, and that she was very much in love with Tear. | After checking Corinna’s nmnchl‘ affairs yesterday, Lieut. Itzel said to- day he was waiting a report on a sec- | ond savings account which Corinna | was supposed to have kept in a Wash- | ington bank. Arthur Keefer of Mount | Rainier, attorney for the Loring fam- ily, was to check up on this phase of the girl's affairs and report to Lieut. Itzel when he has something definite. In addition to two $1,000 life in- surance policies, the girl left property worth perhaps $1,500, including some | $600 in postal savings accounts and farm loan bonds, her office equipment, furniture and the money in two sav- | ings accounts. The savings account | already examined showed less than | $100 on deposit in a Mount Rainier | bank. 'ASSURE INSTRUCTION ' ON SOCIAL SECURITY Board Promises to Advise Em- ployers Falling Within Scope of Act. Assurance employers falling withia scope of the various taxation features | of the social security law will be given adequate instruction as to liability and procedure was issued yesterday by the | Social Security Board. | Pending such notice, it was said, “there need be no haste at present for employers to make arrangements re- garding the purchase of legal and ac- counting procedures and new pay roll and record forms.” This action on the part of the board was taken, it was explained, because of the expressed anxiety of many employers as to pro- cedure required of them. None of the Federal taxes are due before January 1, 1937, it was pointed out. Under title 9, that calling for State unemployment compensation systems, an excise tax is levied on 1936 pay rolls, but no return or payment is due before the following year. Taxes for the Federal old-age insurance plan of title 8 are levied upon both employ- e;gsnnd employes after December 31, 1936. Regulations for payment of the taxes and for determining grants to States are now being prepared by the Social Security Board, the Children's Bureau of the Department of Labor, the Bu- reau of Internal Revenue and the Pub- lic Health Bureau of the Treasury De- partment, all of which have a part in administering the act. ‘World-Wide Cycling. BIGBUSINESS GAIN | store, if it is willing to be just at the | Members of the cast in the playlet given last night at the United States Chamber of Commerce for the opening of the 1936 campaign of the Tuberculosis Association Mardalee Bishop, Jeanne Stevens and Jane Marsh, Tepresenting the spirit of the T. B. insignia. Barbars Hemphill, Ellen Joyce, Sidney Litvin, Newton Jones, PLilip Shepard, Eugene Brand and Robert Azbell. SEEN BY COLLINS Ace Advertiser Predicts $1,500,000,000 Increase if Trend Continues. An increase of $1.500.000,000 in re- tail business “if present trends con- tinue” was predicted as a “‘conserva- tive estimate for 1936 by Kenneth Collins, often termed America’s ace | advertising man, in addressing the | Thanksgiving meeting last night of | the Advertising Club of Washington at the Willard Hotel. “The increase figure sounds impres- sive as a total” he declared, “but when it is reduced to a 5 per cent in- crease across the board, the average normal, will find itself but little better | off in volume at the end of 1936 than | it was at the end of 1935.” The increase would compare with & total estimated business in retail stores this year of $33,000,000,000. Collins counseled the 200 men and | women present to go after the “mar- | ginal” business. 1It's worth going after, he cited. even if it requires the | expenditure of “what may look like & prohibitive price for advertising to insure your getting your share.” Added Fund Held Justified. While a normal business won't| spend more than 3 or 4 or 5 per cent | of its volume for advertising, still, he | sald, it's worth spending as much as | 5 per cent and more of the hoped-for | volume of that “marginal” amount in additional advertising to make sure | of getting that margin—for the mar- | |gin may go up for a successful store | to as high as 20 per cent, instead of | the 5 per cent normal increase. “New school” economists will assert | that if large sums of money in excess | of normal amounts are spent for ad vertising this coming year, there will be a corresponding increase in the price of goods. “I say to them,” he asserted, “the history of our generation in business has taught us that apparently high | advertising costs have resulted in lower prices for goods.” The old Adam Smith theory of supply and demand— at least in any consideration of manu- | factured goods—does not now hold water, he added. Fund “Trades” Urged. Sylvan King of the Merchants and | Manufacturers’ Association told th Advertising Club members to ‘‘urge the people to circulate their money and make this a perfect Christmas.” Truth in advertising was strongly advocated by E. J. Adams, chairman of the Special Board of Investigation, Federal Trade Commission. The club also heard Edwin C. Baltz, secretary of the Perpetual Building Association and vice presi- dent of the United States Building and Loan League; Mabelle Jennings, WJSV commentator, and Gordon Hittenmark of the National Broad- casting Co. PresideAt Norman C. Kal presided at the meeting. 'RADIO ENGINEER VICTIM OF BULLET Walter A. Parks, 38, of WMAL Had Been Despondent Since Death of Wife. Walter A. Parks, 38, chief engineer for Radio Station WMAL, was found shot through the heart today in his | home at 4008 Twentieth street north- | east. A .45-caliber revolver was be- i side the body. | Friends said Parks had been de- | spondent since the death of his wife | & month ago. Capt. Sidney J Marks of the twelfth police precinct was told | Parks had been living alone since then, | although his mother and an aunt had | been staying with him a day or so. The mother, Mrs. Natalie Parks, and aunt, Miss Frances Pollock, who were in the kitchen when they heard the shot, found the body on a couch in the front room. They called police. Capt. Marks said Parks was a naval aviator during the World War and shot himself with a service revolver. No notes were found. Parks had been working for the National Broad- casting Co. five years. Young Lovers Found Dead in Gravel Pit; Notes Left Parents By the Associated Press, SHERIDAN, Wyo.,, November 27.—The bodies of Dorothy Beth- urem, 15, and Donald Eychaner, 19, whose romance had been spiked by parental objedions, were found in a water-filled gravel pit yesterday, & bullet hole in the forehead of each. Coroner W. F. Schunk described the deaths as murder and suicide. The young couple disappeared November 16 on the eve of the girl's departure for the East. The coroner said notes, addressed to the parents, told of their frus- trated love., |CITIZENS DEBATE LIQUOR QUESTIONS| Logan-Thomas Circle Association Condemns Careless Disposal of Bottles. Animated discussion of several phases of the liquor question, with most mem- bers indicating “dry” sentiment, marked the regular monthly meeting last night of the Logan-Thomas Cir- cle Citizens’ Association. The discussion was occasioned by a resolution of the Sixteenth Strest Highlands Citizens’ Association cen- suring Thomas E. Lodge, president of the Federation of Citizens’ Associa- tions, for supporting a petitioner for liquor license renewal which the asso- ciation opposed. Several members questioned the pro- priety of Lodge's appearing before the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board re- garding a matter in a neighborhood other than that in which he lives. The association decided, however, to au- thorize its delegates to the federation to support whatever action the latter body takes. Bince repeal, members complained, streets, Jawns and parkways constantly have become littered with empty and broken liquor bottles, especially at in- tersections with traffic lights where im- bibing motorists toss out the empties when stopped at red lights. ‘The association adopted a resolution advocating either a change in the terminus of the Ninth street car line or provision of a token fare transfer for service between Pennsylvania ave- nue and G street. Contemplated action on changing the regular monthly meeting date to a time earlier in each month was de-| erred. — FRAUD JURY TRIAL DEMAND ABANDONED Former Army Cook Pleads Guilty to 11 False-Pretense Counts in Police Court. Isaac Brown, 35, colored, former Army cook, who was accused of hav- ing victimized Col. Phillip B. Peyton of 2415 Twentieth street of more than $200 since last May and who demanded a jury trial when arraigned in Police Court November 9, withdrew the de- {mand when arraigned on another charge yesterday and entered pleas of guilty to 11 charges of false pretenses. The new charge is that on November 1 he secured $10 from Col. Alonzo Gray, U. 8. A, retired, of 3901 Con- necticut avenue by representing him- self to be the chauffeur for the com- manding general at Fort Benning, Ga., who had been here for the funeral of his father and was without funds to return to his post. He was sen- tenced by Judge Gus A. Schuldt to serve 180 days in jail on this charge. The guilty pleas in the other cases were received by Judge Walter J. Casey in Jury Court. Sentence was deferred. Police claim that Brown victimized Col. Peyton by calling on the tele- phone, representing himself to be Capt. Noah Brinson of the War College and asking that Brown be given financial assistance. Later, Col. Peyton re- ceived another telephone call, alleg- edly from Capt. Brinson, thanking him for his kindness to Brown. Each of these transactions was for a small amount, but when Brown is alleged to have attempted to secure $100, Col. Peyton’s suspicions were aroused and the police were called in. ADVERTISEME FalseTeeth Don’t allow your false ceeth to drop or slip when you eat, talk or laugh. Just sprinkle a little Kling on your plates. This new improved powder {forms a comfort cushion—holds plates so snug, they Nfeel and act, like Zoltan Salkowsky and Gyula Bartha | Kling. Gi have arrived in Cardiff, Wales, on a motor cycle tour of the world, and reported they had covered 90,000 miles in 63 countries in their seven years in the saddle. " Relief For The Itching of Eczema It's wonderful the way soothing, cooling Zemo brings relief to itching, burning skin, even in severe cases. Itching usually stops when Zemo touches tender and irritated skin, be- cause of its rare ingredients. To com- fort the irritation of Rashes, Ring- worm, Eczema and Pimples, always use clean, soothing Zemo. It should be in every home. Insist on genuine Zemo. Approved by Good House- keeping Bureau, No. 4874. 35c, 60c, $1. All druggists’. 5 A Front row: Mary Chamberlain, Virginia Webb, Back row: —Star Staff Photo. L | TELL OF FIGHT ON TUBERCULOSIS |Envoys of Seven Nations Inaugurate Sale of Christ- mas Seals. International phases of the world-| wide campaign against tuberculosis were presented last night by seven | | foreign diplomatic representatives in | ceremonies at the United States Cham- ber of Commerce Building. The services marked inauguration | of the annual Christmas Seal drive in the United States which begins | Thanksgiving and closes Christmas | day. Participating in the symposium of | 5-minute talks were the Ambassadors | of France, Brazil and China, the| Ministers of Denmark, the Union of | | South Africa, Austria and the Irish! Free State: Mrs. Ernest R. Grant, | managing director of the District Tu- berculosis Association, and Dr. George C. Ruhland, District health officer. Kills 70,000 Annually. Dr. Ruhland, said the white plague continues as our country's leading cause of death between the ages of 15 and 45, it being responsible for 70,000 | deaths annually. | Mrs. Grant in the opening talk cited the tremendous importance | | which must be attached to any dis- ease causing 44 nations to join in a | fight against it. In presenting phases of the tubercu- losis problem in the individual na- tions, Edgar Prochnik, Minister of Austria, stated the campaign in his country had been initiated by the government, which still co-ordinates the activities of the various agencies, | Aside from crowded living conditions, the chief problem in Vienny he said, was the fine sand in the fissures of the city's stone streets. This ebndi- tion is believed to constitute one of | the largest obstacles in combating the disease there. French Government Active. Andre de Laboulaye, Ambassador of | France, said that in his country also success of the tuberculosis work was due largely to government interest. A | series of federal acts, most important | of which are the decree on the crea- | tion of tuberculosis dispensaries and | the act of 1919 relating to sanatoriums, have greatly strengthened the move- | ment there. | ownership interests to report both to| MORE GAS SHARES AUCTIONED TODAY Utilities Commission Gets Notice of Sale in New York. Ten more shares of “beneficial in- ‘erest” in Washington & Suburban Cos., which controls the Washington Gas Ligh: Co., were to be sold at auc- tion today in New York, according to notice served this morning on the Dis- trict Public Utilities Commission by attorneys for the out-of-town interests. This development served further to raise the question here as to just what is behind the series of moves in New York concerning ownership interest in the control of the Washington utility. The advice came by letter from Arthur H. Dean of the law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell, which announced it had been notified the Public Util- ities Associates, Inc. planned to sell today at auction 10 of the 600 shares of “beneficial interest” it holds in ‘Washington & Suburban Cos. 1,800 Shares Sold Last Week. Last week several corporations hoh!-k ing shares in Washington & Suburan Cos, a Massachusetts common law trust, sold at public auction a total of 1,800 shares of “beneficial interest” in the trust. Reports here are that they were bought by Outwater and| Wells, for $3.50 a share, said to be far| less than their real value. The buyer | was said to represent an undisclosed | principal. ' The 1,800 shares amounted to about | 30 per cent of the total number of shares in the trust, or what amounts | to about 25 per cent of the common stock of the Washington Gas Co. Chairman Riley E. Elgen of the Dis- trict Utilities Commission, promptly called for a report on the real buyers of the 1,800 shares. A reply from Dean was unsatisfactory to Elgen, and the latter threatened to ask District Su- preme Court to reopen the gas owner- ship case unless the New York interest disclosed the demanded information. Case Held Open by Court. Creation of the common law trust was recognized in the consent decree here in 1932, but at the time the court held the case open and required the the court and to the commission any changes affecting ownership. Attorney Dean, by a second letter | received today by Chairman Elgen, declared “we have no wish or desire to argue with the commission” con- cerning interpretation of the consent decree. Dean said he regretted “very | much” there should have been any misunderstanding. He said it was the purpose of the trustees of Washington & Suburban Cos. to keep the com-! mission “as fully informed as it could” with respect to transfers of shares. ! Dean told Elgen the law firm was | asking the trustees to write to Out- water and Wells and ask them for | | whose account the 1,800 shares were | purchased. . DR. CHARLES WILDER | DIES AT AGE OF 41 Colored Physician Had Prac- ticed Profession Here 15 Years. Dr. Charles M. Wilder, 41, widely- known colored physician of this city, where he had practiced for approxi- | mately 15 years, died today at his home, 226 I street, after a long ill- ness. A native of Washington, Dr. Wilder was the son of the late Dr. James R. Wilder, who practiced here for many years. The younger Dr. Wilder was graduated in medicine from the Dartmouth. Funeral services will be held at his late residence Saturday at 1:30 pm. | Burfal will be in Lincoln Memorial Cemetery. | | Retired Navy Commander Helped Comdr. E. A. Bryant private practice, Comdr. Bryant had | and had specialized in patent law. Doggy PUPS TAKE TRIP IN STRATO HELMET. These Chihuahua dogs of Capt. Orvil A. Anderson, stratosphere fiyer, pose in the flying helmet of the man who helped break the stratosphere record Although these dogs are constant companions of Capt. Anderson, they did not ac- company him on his historic flight. —Harris-Ewing Photo. BRYANT’S FUNERAL HELD IN ARLINGTON, HOPKINS FAVORS PERMANENT WORK America Will Not Allow Des- titute to Shift for Selves, He Says. By the Associated Press. CLEVELAND, November 27.—When the W. P. A. ends next July the future of work relief will be up to Congress, but Harry L. Hopkins, Federal relief administrator, believes the American people never will consider allowing the destitute to shift for themselves again, “I have my notions as to what ought to be done,” he said last night after a lecture here. “I believe there should not be any more direct relief. There ought to be a more or less permanent work program.” The Federal Government in the fu- ture should provide numerous types of security, he said, including “decent old-age pensions, unemployment insur= ance, employment “assurance,” in- cluding a continuous work program and retention of the C. C. sick in- surance, and a guarantee of decent homes. # In an interview, however, Hopkins said he believed the responsibility for caring for the unemployed from now on rested definitely with the States and local governments, FUEL OIL and SERVICE Ralph J. Moore Coal Co. 1401 N. Cap. St Pot. 0970 AMsted ih COLONIAL FUEL OIL O WILLIAMS OnoMATIC Men and Women Employed or Unemployed Organize Dental Corps—Given | Military Honors. Funeral services for Comdr. Emory | Addison Bryant, 72, U. 8. N., retired, | who helped organize the Naval Den- | tal Corps, were held today in Arling- t on Cemetery with full mili- tary honors at the grave. Mem- bers of the Navy Dental Corps were pallbearers 4 Comdr. Bryant, | whose home was at 3014 Gates road, died Mon- | day night in| Naval Hospital after a long ill- ness. Widely known among members of the dental profession, both in the service and in invented a number of dental de- | vices. He held law degrees from | George Washington University and | Naticnal University School of Law, | MRS. SARAH WOLVEN DIES AT AGE OF 81/ Mrs. Sarah Poe Wolven, 81, mother | of Canon Raymond L. Wolven, chaplain | at the Washington Cathedral, and Col. Frank H. Wolven, U. S. A, died yes- terday at her home, 3317 Wisconsin avenue, after a brief {llness. She was| the widow of James R. Wolven, New | Jersey State editor of the New York World. For many years, Mrs. Wolven was an active worker in the Episcopal churches at Jersey City and Bloomfield, N. J., | University of Pennsylvania and also where she lived until the death of her | | held a bachelor of science degree from | husband, about 10 years ago. She was born in Canada, but moved to Jersey City as a small girl. Funeral services will be held Priday at 10 am. in Bethlehem Chapel of the ‘Washington Cathedral. Burial will be .Accident Insurance £5.000 Doubling to $10,000 8500 All Medical Expenses Cost $10 Semi-Annually Folder on Request M. Le Roy Goff 1036 Woodward Bldg. Nat. 0310 Dine in the ex- clusive new conversation room for ladies and gentlemen. Nearby the place you shop, the show you see, or the of- fice you leave. Drop in any time from Npon Till 1 AM. Dally The Willard Hotel L) LA MEDIT] Dr. Wilder was a past president of | at Bloomfield. Her two sons are the Denmark, birthplace of the anti- tuberculosis movement, now has tne| lowest death rate from this disease of | any country in Europe, according to her Minister, Otto Wadsted. He said this condition had been brought nbout{ largely through the efforts of Danish scientists—Finsen, discoverer of the treatment by ultra-violet rays; Bang, originator of the method for eradi- | cation of bovine tuberculosis, and Moelgaard, famous for his gold salts treatment. Play Recal's Idea. | The program of talks was preceded by a playlet, “The Postmaster's | Dream,” given by members of the Travel Club at Gordon Junior High School. The drama was a portrayal |of the Christmas seal idea as con- | ceived 3 years ago in the mind of & Danish postmaster, Einar Holboell, Throughout the Nation today the 2,000 city and county units of the | tuberculosis association placed in the | mails millions of penny Christmas | seals for delivery Friday to homes all | over the United States. The cam- paign in the District, an area rank- ing second in the Nation in tubercu- losis mgqrtality, must be conducted with a view to alleviating tubercular conditions among the colored popula- tion, Dr. Ruhland stated. The death rate from the disease here, he said, :is six colored persons for every white | person, . Moratorium Hurts. Banks in Salvador are severely hit | by the new mortgage moratorium. Davenport and the Medical Chirurgical Society here. | He also belonged to several fraterni- | only survivors. T ties. | = He Is survived by his widow, Mrs. | Jennie T. Wilder; a son, Charles M. Wilder, jr.; a daughter, Jean M. Wilder; his mother, Mrs. Sallie C. ‘Wilder, and a sister, Mrs. Susie Wilder | Thompson. Many Shortsighted. Half the university students Japan are short-sighted, according to a recent investigation. 18th and Col. Rd. 12 to 8:15 De Luxe 6-Course Thanksgiving $ l _0‘_) Turkey Dinner__. An old-fashioned Thanksgiving Dinner with all the fixings and trimmings. Also Serving a Special Turkey Dinner, 75¢ CATERING Mince and Pumpkin Pies and Other Holiday Delicacies. SreciaL o UPHOLSTERING Chair Cushions New Spring Construction, $1.50 Up Cogswell Chairs Upholstered_____$11.50 Club Chairs Upholstered________- 13.50 Fireside Chairs Upholstered___-- 14.50 Have your upholstering done ri; ght and put back on its proper e by our skilled mechanics who have been with us for years. While spending money, get the best workmanship you can Chair Caneing, Porch Rockers Splinted Call US today or Tomorrow \ MORAL: Save Money Now LAY ARMSTRONG 1235 10th St. N.W, MELt. 2062 Luxe se e u Route. TALIAN LINE. 621 3th Ave. A GRAND OPENING THANKSGIVING DAY COCKTAIL sROOM3 LAFAYETTE HOTEL NEWS! Reservations LAFAYETTE Sixteenth and THE MOST All for Martinl cocktall an terne or Claret for ea on $1.50 Thanksgivin, from soup to nuts. 12 (moon) till 8:30 p. Day Make Your Reservation Early. OTEL HARRI young turkey with al Best Thanksgiving Dinner in Town— ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS in our main dining room suggested Music HOTEL Eye Streets YOU COULD WISH FOR COCKTAIL, WINE TURKEY DINNER Only $1.50 d_bottle of Sau- ch guest included spread. Tender, I the trimmings m. Thanksgiving Phone Miss Green. National 8140. NGTON