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“GROCER” NORRIS 10 GO ON TRIAL Nebraskan Who Tried to! Defeat Veteran Senator Faces Jury Tomorrow. By the Associated Press. LINCOLN, Nebr., November 30.— “Grocer” George W. Norris, key fig- ure in an attempt to defeat Senator | George W. Norris by a duplicate filing ! in the 1930 Ne-| braska primary, | will go to mal‘ here Monday in | Federal District Court on a per- | jury indictment. The grocer, for- merly a chain | store manager at | Broken Bow,]| Nebr., i5 charged with testifying falsely Lefore the United States Senatorial Cam- paign Jund In- vestigating Com- mittee, headed by Senator Gerald P. Nye, which investigated Nebraska's 1930 primary campaign. The second Norris, who now lives in Alva, Okla., attempted to file as a candidate for the Republican United States senatorial nomination, but his papers arrived one day too late. Financial Support Involved. He was indicted for allegedly falsely telling the new committee that: 1. The $50 sent as his filing fee was his own money. 2. That he had received no assur- ance of financial support if he would Tun against Norris. 3. That Victor Seymour, then man- | ager of the Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee's Western office in Denv did not make available any money for his campaign. 4. That he himself wrote the state- ment announcing his candidacy. Seymour Sent to J Seymour, a Lincoln Republican, re- cently completed a six-months’ jail sentence for perjury before the same committee. An attempt to gain a presidential commutation of sentence for Seymour failed when Senator Norris objected. Seymour’s conviction is believed to have been the first of its kind in the United States. ‘\ The Nye committee questioned some of the most prominent Republicans in Nebraska during its investigation, but only Seymour and “Grocer” Norris were indicted After “Groc | George W. Norris. Norris’ name was | ruled off the ballot, Senator Norris won the nomination and was re- tleriterl. LODGES TO OBSERVE Memorial Services at Church in Fairfax Tomorrow. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. FAIRFAX, Va, November 30.— Fairfax Council, Order Fraternal Americans, and Providence Council, Daughters of America, will hold their | annual memorial service tomorrow at | Truro Episcopal Church at 11:15 a.m., | with Rev. Herbert A. Donovan, rector, | conducting the service. Members of the two orders will meet at their hall and march to the church in a body. The general public has| been invited to participate in the service. . Livermore (Continued rallied slightly after seeing his father. The doctors believed the crisis would come during the night. He was struck in the chest by a .22-caliber bullet which coursed downward through the liver and lodged near the spine, REILLY OFFERS AID. Hauptmann Attorney Friend of Mrs. Livermore. NEW YORK, November 30 () —Ed- ward J. Reilly, counsel for Bruno Hauptmann in the Lindbergh case, #aid that he was leaving by train Tues day afternoon for Santa Barbara “to do whatever I can for Mrs. Livermore,” now facing charges growing out of the shooting of her son, Jesse Livermore, Jr. “I Raven't been retained by Mrs. Livermore, but I expect to be of help to her,” he announced. Reilly said that a lifetime acquaint- ance with Mrs. Livermore prompted his decision to travel West. She once lived in Brooklyn, near the Reilly home, he said. “I'm a member of the California bar, you know,” he added, “and that may be of some help.” Says FULI all points within 1,000 guaranteed service: iocal moving also. Phone National 1460 NAT. DEL. ASSOC.. INC.. 1317 N. Y. ave UPHOLSTERING DONE IN YOUR HOME. | Cushions_refilled. new_springs. $2 each. Address Box 16:-R. Star office. DAILY TRIPS MOVING LOADS AND PART loads to and from Balto.. Phila. and New JYork Freauent trips fo other Eastern pendable Service Since 150 TRANSFER & STORAGE- ns. Phone Decaty AUCTION SALE—FURNITURE OF EVERY | description to be soid for storage charses | on Thursday. December our warehouse, 420 h st foor. "Consicting e living room sultés, i | Toom suites. dining suites. dressers. ta- bles. inens. dishes. books. STATES STORAGE hairs. b CONPANY. INVALID ROLLING AIRS—Fol T anler new and fsed: sl Sbles aif staen: o Guced prices, ONITED STATES STORAGE | CO. 418 10th st s CHRISTMAS GREETING Fomms WIT] matched envelopes: excellent beautiful. Exceptional for the mone: lease; box of 1. each different. $1. foran ) Keniyon st. n.w. Col BWEEPING —C OMPOUND (KLEE} Bweepe); keep the dust down when :aeep Ing_your shop and basement floors. inexpensive preventive of a health damage menace " Put up in and 350-1b. bbls., 35, BF.RG&. c SONS. National 1 78I CHRISTMAS—RIGHT NOW 157 TIM] to have those old pictures rédroduces 1ot | Christma iniatures i been specialts Photographers._1333 P. 1s one of the largest | he CHAMBERS unde: taken n i world. Complete funerals low as $75 Up. §ix chapels, twelve. parlors, seventeen cars. hearses and ambulances. twenty-five | uuderuken and assistants. 1400 Chnn'n st. n.w., Columbia 0432 517 11th st s _Atlantic 670 Apples—Sweet Cider. ROCKVILLE FRUIT FARM. | Drive to Rockville. Md.. two blocks west ds. 1T} will 3 A nnd 25-1b. tins, | ML ENB- 8 National 4900. | | LL ' fiict, the matter of France joining is | private by Capt. Glen and Sir Samuel THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., DECEMBER 1, 1935—PART ONE. Mrs. Livermore Goes to Cell in Shooting Left: Mrs. Dorothea Livermore shown at Santa Barbara, Calif, yesterday being led to her cell, held on suspiclon of assault with intent to murder her son, Jesse, jr. 16, with a rifle. With her is Sheriff James Ross. Above: D. E. (Bill) Nevelle, tutor of the wounded youth, photo- graphed yesterday. Nevelle, said to have been engaged to marry Mrs. Livermore, was present during the tipsy argument, which he said led to the shooting. —Copyright, 4 A. P. Wirephotos. LIBRARY OBSERVES MARK TWAIN DAY Crowds Inspect Pictures, Books and Manuseripts of Humorist. BY JAMES WALDO FAWCETT. Yesterday—the centenary of the writer's birth—was Mark Twain day at the Library of Congress. Crowds | of admirers of his works visited the | building to inspect a commemorative display of books, manuscripts and pic- tures relating to his career. As arranged by Martin A. Roberts, superintendent of the reading rooms, David C. Mearns and V. W. Clapp, hall of the main floor, fills 72 divisions of nine large cases, totals approxi- mately 300 different, items, and ranges through the whole life of the man known as “America’s most popular author.” Much of the material is unique. Included are the original title pages of almost a score of Mark Twain’s books as submitted for copyright under the law which formerly required such registration. Many of these notations | were made by the writer ‘o his own hand. Mississippi Is Depicted. Rare old photographs of Mark Twain's several homes, at Florida and | Hannibal, Mo.; Elmira, N. Y.; Redding | and Hartford, Conn., also are on view, and with these are valuable prints | of the famous Currier and Ives series | the show occupies the entire north | That Failed,” published in the Cen- tury Magazine in 1885, with maps of his own composition. A comic map of the fortifications of Paris, 1870, ap- pears in a page from the Buffalo Ex- press sent to the library by the “ar- tist” for preservation for posterity. Reflecting Mark’s residence in Washington is a copy of a memoir of Senator Willlam M. Stewart of Ne- vada, whose clerk he was in 1867 and 1868. The library also has pho- tostats of his letters from the Capi- tal, never before collected. Patent Papers Exhibited. One case of the exhibition is as- signed to papers relating to Mark Twain's applications for patents. The products of his inventive genius in- cluded a self-pasting scrapbook, a garment strap and a device for | moulding metals. Curious in the extreme are neigh- boring copies of “Tom Sawyer, the Kentucky Detective, or Game to the Last,” by Warne Miller, M. D., in the |Old Cap Collier Library, 1887, and “Tow Sawyer, Detective,” by Mark Twain, in Harper's for September, 1896. Equally interesting are copies of a mazurka and a waltz written by Felix Kraemer and X. Y. Z. respectively, in tribute to Mark, the title page of the latter providing evidence that there was a cigar bearing Twain's name on the market at the time. Deposit books shown include: “Roughing It,” “Burlesque Auto- biography,” and its more | equivalent; “Sketches, Old and New,” “The Gilded Age,” “A Tramp Abroad,” “The American Claimant,” “Merry Tales,” “Pudd'n’head Wilson,” “Tom Sawyer Abroad,” “Following Equator,” ! Diary,” Capt Stormfield’s " Visit to | Heaven” and “Joan of Arc.” There likewise is' displayed the | sgrious | the | “Extracts From Adam'’s| ELLSWORTH SHIP SPEEDS 10 CHILE Up Airplane En Route to Ross Sea. By Radio to The Star. ON BOARD M. 8. WYATT EARP, Ellsworth's supply ship is once more way to Magallanes, where she will refuel, pick up an airplane and turn south again to lay food depots on her way to the Ross Sea. The depots will be lajd at Charcot Island as a matter of precaution, for it is hoped that Ellsworth and Her- attempt to fly across Antarctica and that they are now at the Bay of Whales. The Polar Star’s wireless has not | been heard for a week, and when it was last heard from, Ellsworth was only half way to .he Ross Sea. When the signals faded the plane wes still flying well and there is no reason to suppose that it would not continue to do so for the other 1,000 miles nec- essary to complete the flight from Dundee Island, Weddell Sea, to the Bay of Whales. The Wyatt Earp has now journeyed almost 70,000 miles in Ellsworth’s | service, and, to Capt. Hartvig Olsen, there has States of the Union who may be representing the Mississippi Valley .s‘manuscnpt of the dramatic version of | never been a hitch or a day's delay |it was in the period when Twain, “The Gilded Age” together with the when the ship has been called upon under his real name of Samuel Lang- | typescript of the play based on “The | for action. She is now beginning an- threatened with diplomatic tourists. The case of Djalal, the Iranian minister, is not the first one brought to the attention of the State Depart- | ment. It is probably more unpleasant because the Iranian diplomat did not | know that in this country violence is answered by violence—as far as the police are concerned. * ok kX A little more than a year ago a distinguished naval atiache landed in jail in Virginia on a charge of drunk- | 1 enness and reckless driving. He spent This Changing World Diplomats Here Doubt Il Duce Will Bathe World in Bloed—Breathing Space Expected Before Application of Oil Embargo. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN, CONSTANTINE BROWN. ASHINGTON diplomats still doubt Mussolini will make good his threat to bathe the world in blood when an embargo on oil is applied against Italy. There is more than one way, they say, for Il Duce to squeeze out of a tight situation The oil embargo will be voted on December 12. Its actual applica- tion, as in the case of the previous economic sanctions, will be delayed until later in December. This will give the French a dreathing spell to try and convince Il Duce of the necessity of accepting some sort of peace terms which cannot be un- Javorable to Italy. It is only after Italy’s dictator shows the same adamant attitude that the embargo on oil will be actually put into effect. Oil is more important to Italy than | any other war paraphernalia. It is| essential not only for the Italian Navy, but for the actual continuation of war BY ogainst Ethiopia. The Italian Army done for two reasons; first it is more | | sary facilities for the repair ofgbattle- | | cial since the World War. in the field does not use much am- munition. Airplanes and tanks are the principal weapons upon which Mus- | solini counts to defeat the Ethiopians. And these are useless if Italy cannot obtain the mecessary gasoline. In the present war gas is more important. than men. * ok ok % That Laval should have joined the British in their action against Italy | is only natural now. Laval has man- aged to save his ministry, thanks to| the support of the left groups in the Chamber. He had to pay the price to Edouard Herriot and that price is an absolute support of the British policy against Ttaly. But, if the situation de- velops 5o as to mean an armed con- still controversial. * % K % It is clear from statements made in | | Hoare that the Britist. government is more interested in getting rid of Mussolini than saving the Ethiopians from being swallowed up by the | Italians. During the Napoleonic wars Eu- rope never would have defeated the “Little Corporal” without the Brit- ish. King George IV did not fight the French nation as such—he ‘merely fought Napoleon. The same thing is likely to be re- peated in the reign of King George V. | The British do not want to fight the Italians—they are aiming to destroy Mussolini—the Fascist corporal. * Xk X X If reports from London ere correct the stage is already set to replace Il Duce. There is a good deal of talk of King Victor Emanuel becoming | again the active ruler of Italy with a cabinet in which Marshal Badoglio would play the first fiddle and former | Prime Minister Sforza—a bitter op- | | ponent of fascism, who lives at pres- ent in London and in Paris—foreign | secretary. London gossip is generally inspired and as such worthy of a good | deal of credence. * ok ok * In the meantime while London and | Paris announce piously to & worried | world that there still is hope for a | | undergoing the Island of Cypres have become un- | tenable before the Italian air menace. * % % is admitted by British strategists. can be wiped out in 24 hours by the Italian aviators. Fama- gosta was never an important naval base. Today it has become actually useless because of the proximity of the two important Italian bases, the islands of Rhodes and Leros in the Dedecanese group. * % % Malta, it Y EDiT maRANE AN The British have concentrated part of their fleet at Haifa. This has been inaccessible to the Italian forces and secondly it is the terminus of the im- | portant pipe line which brings oil from |Iraq to the Mediterranean. Despite | the tremendous work of the British m make that Palestinian port a first- class naval station Haifa is still far from being a real naval base. Alexandria, in Egypt is an ideal | harbor but has not yet got the neces- scarred ships. The British have in the Mediter- | | ranean today 6 of the 11 battleships | | which it has in commission. Four o{‘ | them—the Warspite, the Repulse, the | Royal Oak and the Mslnyn—nre\ extensive changes at Portsmouth and at Davenporta and | won't be ready until late in 1936. The | other four have to be kept in home waters. The bulk of her cruiser, de- | stroyer and submarine fleets are con- centrated at Gibraltar, Alexandria, Haifa, and other minor points in the Mediterranean. * Italy maintains her battle forces— seven large cruisers and 10 light cruisers in the home waters. Her| submarines and airplanes, the chief weapons upon Wwhich Mussolini is counting in a war against Great Bri- tain, are concentrated at Augusta and Trapani in the Island of Sicily and slong the coast of Africa at Tripolis, Beghazi and Tabruk. * % * x Naval experts admit that should Mussolini make good his threat to challenge Great Britain on the sea, the Italian air force and the Italian submarines will be able to cause a lot | of damage to the British fleet. That |in the end Italy—or Mussolini—will be defeated is a foregone conclusion. But before Il Duce strikes his dicta- | | torial flag he will have inflicted some irreparable damage to the Britisa lion. * ok % ok The State Department intends fn start a correspondence course on how | to handle diplomats and the dlfle':-‘ ence between a minister representing | ®_foreign government and a minister | of the gospel for policemen in various — SalE FOR RENT ck Stors 3 Seott Clircle: Space Tor'§ to 8 eare Fi 2”0ath abeve “cloe. vas » Re-new that old dre: Pee Gee the night in a cell and when he sobered up. he was released. The Governor apologized—coldly—and the naval attache was recalled a few weeks later. There are many instances when young secretaries drive like mad- men because they know that on account of the little tag with “Dip- lomatic” above their license they cannot be touched by the law. When they get into trouble in some Midwestern States they are pained when, upon erhibiting the State Department identity card, signed by Secretary Hull, the country po- licemen say: “And who in hades is this guy Hull> The name of the secretary of state of our State is | So and So.” The Governors, as a rule. know who Mr. Hull is. In Washington policemen are con- versant with immunity of diplomats and sorrowfully shake their aeads when they see some young biood passing red lights or driving the wrong way on Dupont Circle. Gerrit von Haeften, the former Ger- man attache, got a ticket once for parking. He went next day to the police court to pay his fine. When he produced his license showing that he was a diplomat he was thrown out of court, the judge saying: to get into trouble with the State De- partment.” IREAR ADMR. G. C. DAY IS RETIRED BY NAVY 47 Years of Service Brought to End for President of Inspec- tion and Survey Board. More than 47 years of service in the Navy were brought to a close ves- terday for Rear Admiral George Cal- vin Day. president for four vears of | the Navy Board of Inspection and | Survey, who was placed on the re- tired list on reaching the age of 64. He is credited with having inspected | more new vessels than any other offi- Duty took \ him aboard 18 new warships, five mod- ernized battleships and the two dir- igibles, Akron and Macon. Tomorrow Admiral Day’s successor, | Rear Admiral John D. Wainwright, | until recently commander of the Yangtze Patrol of the Asiatic Fleet, | will become the new president of lhe board. The Navy Cross was awarded Ad-| miral Day for his World War service | in command of the U. S. S. America | and later the U. S. S. Montana, en- | | gaged in transporting and escorting | troops and supplies to European ports. Turn your old trinkets, jewelry and watches into MONEY at— A.Kahn Jnc. Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET INVEST IN YOURSELF Train to Be Useful and Success Will Be Much EASIER. DO IT NOW. SHORTHAND Gress of Boyd B nx“‘?lmnltfled;' em. Beneficial to every one. 13 ity o Mastered . thru _our ALL CLASS ¥ " usual Method. Saves time master it. and you really typing _fasc iathg, quired and unlvernfly BOOKEEPING 4%, 5% Thi dividual progress method. course goes into Accounting. Es- sential to employe and employer. ‘Machines — CALCULATING Mschines — makes. Comptometer with t!D!n; bout six weeks day school. widely in_Government and com- mercial offices. CARD PUNCH modern Machine op- horne Clemens, was a river pilot. Of special interest is a facsimile of his | pilot's license, dated April 9, 1859. made his debut in the field of letters. Lcag before that date Mark hsd‘ Prince and the Pauper.” In one of the last cases is a letter \wrluen by Twain to Grover Cleve- land in 1906. Gari Melcher's portrait of the author ‘omer 10,000-mile journey in what is generally considered to be the | stormiest of all oceans. But the | Wyatt Earp, though she rolls, is a good sea boat, and the distance to the The Library displays a copy of “The has a place of honor at the end of Bay of Whales is well within her mar- | Dandy Frightening the ~Squatter.” published in the Carpet Bag for May 1, 1852, and signed with the initials 8. L. C. To illustrate the “accident” which resulted in Twain's entrance into lit- erature, there is a copy of his story, “The Turning Point of My Life” printed in Harper's Bazaar for Feb- ruary, 1910, |to an attack of measles when he was | 12 years old his decision to write. Other Works Nearby. In adjacent cases are copies of “The Adventures of Thomas Jefferson Snodgrass,” which appeared in Keokuk Post in 1856 and 185 ‘Forty-three Days in an Open Boat, ‘rrom Harper's Magazine, December, | 1866: “The Celebrated Jumping Frog.” I 1867; “A Yankee in the Orient,” 1867: the first of about 50 letters to ‘!he Daily Alta Californian, 1867: "By Rail Through France.” Overland Monthly, July, 1868: a letter from “A Passenger” on the Quaker City to the New York Herald, and a copy of the first edition of “Innocents Abroad,”| 1869. Likewise there is a photostat of Mark Twain's application for a pass- port, dated May 20. 1867, in which he described himself as being 31, 5 feet 8'. inches tall, and having a high forehead, medium nose, gray eyes, dark brown hair and a fair com- plexion. With the material on the “Inno- | letter from the author to Dr. Oliver | Wendell Holmes, dated September 30, 1869. The text includes a reference to the “agreeable young lady” who later became Twain's wife. Hoax Is Perpetuated. Nearby are editions of Beadle's Dime Pocket Joke Book and Nast Comic Almanac, to which Mark con- tributed, and a file of Bret Harte's Californian, for which he wrote the | notorious hoax concerning “The Ex- | traordinary Meteoric Shower,” No- vember 19, 1864 Twain's experiences in the Civil War are represented by a copy of hn pmue Hlslnry nr a Cnmpmgn ‘Furnace Parts Be Wise—ANY MAKE WATCH Cleaned Regulated _Ad justed Guaranteed One Year Trade Mark BRING THIS COUPON Monday and Tuesday Special Any shape crystal. 29¢ g Any make spring, 3¢ Your watch is taken com- pletely apart by a watch expert and cleaned with the latest modern elec- tric cleaning machine. On our "tordl we have over 50,000 tisfied customers w--hlnnnn- Largest Exclusive tch Repair Company in which he attributes | the | F. ADAMS 804 F St. N.W. NAtional 2032 the gallery. The exhibition will be open to the public during regular library hours until further notice. 'MRS. OWEN TO GIVE | SEAL PLEA ON RADIO Idea Originated in Denmark, Where She Represents U. §. as Minister. Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, Minister to Denmark. will deliver a radio address | over a Nation-wide network of the | | National Broadcasting Co. at 10:30 p.m. tomorrow in the interest of the Christmas seal campaign of the Tu- | berculosis Association. The Christmas seal idea originated in Denmark. and Mrs. tarian work since the beginning. Noted performers of the radio also | will be on the program. They include | Conrad Thibault, baritone: Winifred Cecil, soprano: the Pickens sisters, Patti, Helen and Jane; the Gypsy Singers, with Harry Salter as con- ductor. Dr. 8. Parkes Cadman, president | of the Federal Council of the Churches ‘o! Christ in America, will lead min- isters of all denominations in the ob- | servance of “Christmas Seal Sunday” “I don't want | cents,” the library exhibits a spirited | today, One hundred thousand appeals to | support the seal campaign will be mailed out in electric bills by the Pommnc Electric Power Co. tomorrow. :' Before Selling Investigate the Prices We Pay for OLD GOLD: AND SILVER Jetwelry of every description, bridge- work, silver. No matter how old or dilapidated " any of foregoing ticles might be. you will be gres surprised at the cash prices Da s by u: (Licensed by U. 8. Govt.) SHAH & SHAH 921 F §t. N.W. Phone NA. 5343—We Will Call. | Money Saving Values at Gibson’s 2 Giant_Size Tubes Bay Rum Shaving Cream, special Tubes Milk of Magnesia Tooth Paste, special $100 Woodbury's Christmas Box for men, special Bottles Perfume or Toilet Water, special Quinine Hair Ton- ic, special Large Jars Sachs Brushless Shaving Cream, special 50c Williams _Sha ing Outfit. Special sizes in gift box, special 39¢ GIBSON CO. 917 G St. N.W, National 2329 We Deliver $1 or more in D. C. 2 CutYour Coal Bills 4 ()7 HAVE Automatic HEAT! Owen'’s talk | is expectell to deal with the humani- | gin. (Copyright. 1935 by the North American lewspaper Alliance, Inc.. and the New York Times Co.) | | DR. VAUG 1932 F St. N.W. Boat Will Refuel and Pick| SHAKESPEARE SOCIETY TO GIVE “MERRY WIVES” J. Edmund Veitch Cast as Sir John Falstaff for Tomor- row Night. Shakespeare’s “Merry Wives of | Windsor” will be presented by the | Shakespeare Society tomorrow night !in St. Paul's Hall, 1421 V street. J. Edmund Veitch i cast as Sir John Falstaff. The two wives are to be played by Yerby Pannill and Es- ANTARCTICA, November 30.—Lincoln | breaking through th: waves on her | bert Hollick-Kenyon, pilot of the air- | plane Polar Star, succeeded in their thanks to her skilled | | chief engineer, Harald Holmboe, and | Theater Building DR. F. J. Dental Surgeon, Associated ther Marshman; Dame Quickly by | Ada Louise Townsend and Ford by Kent Dyer. Others in the cast are Virginia True, John Victory, William Milton, Paul Murphy, James Ra Charles A. Bell, Stanley Karmazin, Milton Hershfield, Dixie Diket, John Chadwick, Lawrence Gichner, William | Zeller, Joseph Harley, Ray Crowell, Willlam Victory, Ann Mathews, Betty Isreal, Gloria Masgoret ang Margaret Reisling. Dyer and Veitch are directing the production under supervision of Dr. E. V. Wilcox, society president. Other performances will be given | next Friday and Saturday at the Ta- | koma Park Community Theater to raise money for the Gilbert memorial fund. - Sorority to Install Officers. Nu Alpha and Nu Beta Chapters of Kappa Delta Phi Sorority will hold a joint installation of officers and for= mal dinner at the Admiral Club, 1640 Rhode Island avenue, tomorrow evee ning. Talent Going to Waste. HARLINGEN, Tex. (#).— Frank Downes borrowed a baby and won a diaper derby, defeating 16 other entrants, in 26 seconds. Downes’ di- vorce decree becomes final next week. War Orphans Gone Only 20,000 now remain of the 1.- 750,000 children of men killed dis~ abled in the World War who came under the charge of the British mine istry of pensions. TWO MORE WEEKS To Take Advantage of Holiday Reductions. My for all classes of dental restorations (full and partial sets of teeth, remov- able and fixed bridges) from 107 to 25% expires on Saturday, De- cember 14th. You don’t have to complete your dental restorations within this time limit. Just come in, have examination made, decide on the class of dental restoration you desire, make satisfactory financial arrangements, and the work can be completed any time this Winter or next Spring. Free X-ray pictures, free extractions, free examination and diagnosis, just as though you were paying regular fees, HAN, Dentist MEt. 9576 offer to reduce fees Metropolitan ROWELL START A SAVINGS ACCOUNT With Part of Your CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CHECK LOANS Now Being Paid on Savings 3% Interest Money for home buyers or mortgage refinancing at re- reduced rates. —Why not use a part of your Christmas Savings check to start a savings account here with 4% in- terest and absolute safety? Savings here are free from personal tax in D. C.—your funds here are insured —accounts are accepted from $1.00 up. FEDERAL INSURANCE UP TO $5,000 The only local association covered by Federal Insurance Open Till 5:30 Gov't Pay Days 4% ON SAVINGS—START WITH $1 TOMORROW COLUMBIA BUILDING ASSOCIATION Established 1907 716 11th Street Opposite Palais Royal Every Year (NE Great Car FLASHES TO THE FRONT! The above {8 reprint from The Evening Star. is n.mhum. The proof of baker sales that have reached unpucld-nnd proportions: L “’Our award for the GREATEST RELATIVE IMPROVE- MENT (1936 over 1935) goes to the Studebaker and . . . Both of these cars have plenty of IT. “Our award for the BEST LOOKING CARS at the Show (New York Automobile Show) goes to them. “’Predictions for 1936. Motor output will increase 20% or more over 1935, STUDEBAKER will show f Court House, then one mile out road to otomac. Sweet Cider—Apples. At Quaint Acres. Superior fiitered cider from w\mfl. clean apples. Open every day 7 am. to 7_p.m. ¢ Stiver snnn:-comvm:n pike (Route pacific solution of the present conflict | between the world and Italy, the Brit- ish ere doing the best to strengthen their somewhat weak position in the Mediterranean. The British Navy, to the dismay of the government, is hardly capa- ble of holding its own in what is considered the most important line of communication with the empire —the Mediterranean Sea. Gibraltar continues to remain an lmpm.lnt umtem point. But the other Malta and Famagosta in eration mas- days. in Dustaess ofces. ® Burn Rice or Buckwheat coal—save 40%. @ Enjoy even, uniform heat e by Minneapolis- @ Fits YOUR heating plant. Honeywell Thermostat, Fully guaranteed. ©® Remember—it pays for itself first year. Pilot will solve your heating problem. HARRIS ARMATURE CO. 9th and O Streets N.W. North 1920 @ No special grates necessary. No drilling. Clamps on. tered in a few the LARGEST GAIN (over 100%)." ° Renulac Varnish Stain (Pt. 75¢) A Vlrllllh and ltlll Cc-il.l.l All for Col.l ClrL MUTH 710 13th N.W, The 1936 STUDEBAKER is priced to challenge even the lowest priced cars, dollar for dollar. Mot ole D Gutle WATCH STUDEBAKER IN 1936! ’ v Se B o BOYD Business University 1333 F St. N.W. Natl. 2338 —that will save you money. Next time u_need reproductions of - Statements. oks. Patent Drawings, Foreign Reprints. etc. let us give you a iree estimate. We Tenroduce by photograph . o oroof- rndlnl necessary._ Samples umbla Planogrnph Co., ‘Metropolitag 4861 A B0 L 8