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REGISTERED AT PUBLIC AUCTION at SLOAN’S, 715 13th St., SATURDAY October 17, 1936 AT 10 AM. TERMS: CASH. ME EASL0AN & co.. ne.. Aucis. THE DERWOOD MILL DERWOOD, MD. Subject to market chances we guote the following low prices on our high- quality feeds. Terms, Cash at the Mill Laying Large Scratch__ 32.25 (With milling wheat) Derwood 33 50 Dog Food_____ Md. Family Flour (In 12-Ib. sacks) Located Bet RockeTls ot Caithersburg Phone—Gaithersburg 19-F-13 Philipsbern " Srlln Bavwan F& G A Living Model will Display Brassiers Thursday Friday and Saturday Besides lifting, rounding and moulding bustlines into lovely, youthful contours, this improved Thrill sepa- rates. Fashioned in a variety of fabrics, in both peach and white. $| lo$|.50 A t CREATION Philipsborn, Street Floor NG STAR, WASHINGTON, Text of Landon Sp_eecli Republican Candidate Tells Grand Rapids Audience That If We Desert Old Truths We Do So at Our Peril. By the Associated Press. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, October 15.—The text of Gov. Alf M. Landon’s speech here last night follows: 1t is a real pleasure for me to be here with you in Grand Rapids. The outside world never thinks of your city without being re- minded of good furniture. Like so many Americans I have spent a good deal of my life in close con- tact with Grand Rapids furniture. If some of you come out to visit me I shall be glad to make you comfortable in a Grand Rapids chair. The craftsmen whose skill is re- sponsible for the success of your famous industry here did not start by discarding good designs which are still famous, even though some of them go back 'way beyond the horse and buggy days. On the contrary, they cherished and re- spected them. They retained some, improved upon others and created in addition, new designs of their own. They recognized that prog- ress is the law of life. They have been proud to go forward in & great tradition. Desert Old Truths Only at Our Peril. ‘This is typical of the people of the United States. They are a progressive people. That is one reason why America is the hope of the world. As a people we recognize that the best government is a progressive application of old truths. We want forward-looking, liberal government, but govern- ment based upon principles that have stood the test of time and experience. We know from history and from the hard school of ex- perience that we desert the old truths only at our peril. By liberal Government we mean a Government liebral enough in its outlook on life not to mistake mere change for progress. We do not mean the kind of Government we have been getting at Washing- ton during the past three and one- half years that has confused change with progress and too often has been liberal in the spending of other people’s money. And speaking of liberality, let me say here what I sald East and West. If I am elected Chief Ex- ecutive the budget is going to be balanced, but it is not going to be balanced by depriving our needy unemployed of the relief that is their right until they can recover real jobs at real wages. It is not going to be balanced by denying aid to the American which he ought to have, and which I believe the Nation wants him to have, Will Use Reliet Funds for Relief Purposes. It is going to be balanced by substituting good administration for bad at Washington, by cutting out waste, incompetency and ex- travagance and by using relief funds for relief purposes instead of squandering them on the bullding up of an insidious political ma- chine. Any one who tells you to the contrary is guilty of trifling with the truth for the sole purpose of attempting to obtain votes under false pretense. Once the Government at Wash- ington has been restored to an efficient and constitutional basis, there is going to be a general re- vival of confidence through the country. And confidence is the forerunner of real recovery. What do we mean by real re- covery? We mean a revival of ag- riculture, commerce and labor that will offer our unemployed real jobs again at the best of good wages. This is the only permanent cure for unemployment. How can any- body say that happy days are here again for the American people when so many millions of our fel- low citizens are still out of work and so many more millions still in need of relief? Under this administration we made the poorest record in our history in recovering from hard times. Those nations who did not try to squander their way out of the depression are much further along the road to recovery than our own. They have less unem- ployment today than at any time since the great war ended. Jobs for Jobless Is Primary Need. In contrast, our primary need Wew BEAUTY Nesr STYLES Nesw> VALUES in the New FALL WATCHES Elgin 15 jewels, natural gold-filled case, with raised figure dial. A smart new lady's wrist Movement. 18 Matched Hamilton ‘The new Clark, curved-to- the-wrist man’s strap watch, ———————————————————————————————————————————— OTHER DIAMOND WATCHES FROM $57.50 TO $350.00 -— Inquire About Our Christmas Ley-Away Plow We Welcome Charge Accounts R Harris . Lo. JEWELERS - SILVERSMITHS - DIAMOND MERCHANTS 1101 F St. N.W. Est. 1874 Phone DI. 0916 today is jobs for the unemployed. That need is just as great as it was in 1933. The country has been ripe for recovery for the last two years. We are far behind in expenditures for upkeep and improvements and for expansion. The total of this demand—in industry, in new en- terprises, in our homes and on our farms—amounts to billions of dollars. Once all this consumer demand is released, the problem will not be where to find jobs for the unemployed. The task then will be to find workers for the work. Nobody can feol the American people. They know recovery when they see it, and many millions of them are getting- tired of having it delayed time after time. We have not made as much progress in coming out of this depression as we have & reason= able right to expect. No one can hide that fact. : 250 TAILORS STRIKE IN SAN FRANCISCO Union Workers Demand Wage Increase From $1 an Hour to $1.15. By the Assoctated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, October 15.— Seeking wage increases, 250 union tallors answered a strike call yester- day against the Contracting Tailors” Association of California. The association has 30 shops in San Francisco and does custom tai- loring work for merchant tailors. ‘The strikers, members of two local | unions, are demanding a wage in-| crease from $1 an hour to $1.15 for | tailors, operators and pressers. Women members are asking a wage boost from 60 cents an hour to 65 cents. For Qfiick Cough Relief, Mix This Remedy, at Home No Cooking. No Work. RealSaving Here's an old home remedy your mother used, but, for real results, i is still the best thing ever known foi coughs that start from colds. Try it once, and you'll swear by it. It's no trouble at all.” Make a syrup | by stiering 2 cups of granulated sugar | and one cup of water a few moments | until dissolved. No cooking is needed— a child eould do it. Now put 2% ounces of Pinex into a pint bottle, and add your syrup. This mves you a full pint of actually better | ugh remedy than you could buy | ru y-made for four times the money. It keeps perfectly, tastes fine, and lasts a family a long time. And there is pmmv»ly nothing like it for quick action. You can feel it| take hold instantly. It loosens the ghlem, soothes the i ed mem- ranes, and helps clear the air passages. No cough remedy, at any price, could be more effective. Pinex is a concentrated compound of Norway Pine, famous for its prompt ac- tion on throat and bronchial mem- branes. Money refunded if it doesn’t pleue you in every way. LABOR RELATIONS ACT ATTACK IS RENEWED Remington Rand Challenges Right of Board to Hear Charges of Striking Employes. By the Assoclated Press. BUFFALO, N. Y., October 15.—The Remington Rand Co. renewed its at- tack on the national labor relations act here yesterday, challenging the right of the Labor Board to hear charges of striking employes that the company was guilty of unfair labor practices. The board, however, refused to grant a compdny motion to dismiss the complaint. Remington Rand questioned the constitutionality of the act as it ap- plied to the present case. It also contended that employes who brought the charges were not engaged in in D. U, IRREGULARITY CHARGED TO PHILADELPHIA W.P.A. G. 0. P. Committee Issues Affi- davit Attributed to Former Officeworker. Ej the Associsted Press. The Republican National Committee last night made public an afdavit at- tributed to James H. Furber of Sharon Hill, Pa., charging irregularities in the Philadelphia office of the Works Progress Administration. It said Furber had resigned after nine months’ work in that office, but “W. P. A. chose to cover up” the resignation. The statement said that “among the charges of ineflicient and dishonest bookkeeping ‘'made by Furber and which affected the sponsors of W. P. A. projects in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland and West Vir- THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1936. ginia,” were: Dual payment of W. P. A, workers, false reports df the number on relief, refusal to correct errors in pay rolls, and “plugging” reports ol expenditures to make reports balance. BB AT et Ordered to Washington. ‘Three Air Corps officers who have just completed tours of duty in Ha- wail and Panama have been ordered to Washington for flying duty at Bolling Field. First Lieuts, John C. Fowler and Lewis R. Parker have been ordered here from the Hawaiian de- partment and First Lieut. David D. Graves from Panama. ——— Japan has established a clinic to re- forza those phnnlnz suicide. IIOIWIOOD GOFFEE 4 Guaranteed FRESH Beautiful features . a graceful form— woman's two treasure: thrights! Those who possess both—safeguard both!— and those who must seek aid to acquire or retain both, will join the EMILE HEALTH CLUB! For definite results with your figure control problems try our ome-month recon- ditioning course, which allows you to come as often as you wish—during that time—the use of the ring roller, mechanical bike, etc, before or after class, S terstate commerce and therefore not subject to regulation by Congress, and that the board had not established that departments in which com- plaining employes were employed “constituted a unit for collective bar- gaining.” RAIN HINDERS FARMERS If Your Dentist Hurts You, Try DR. FIELD Plate Expert Oouble e Suction I Guarantee a Perfect, Tight 1 Give Violet Ray Treatments for Pyorrhea Heavy Downpour, Reported . in Drought-Stricken Areas. Heavy rains now are hindering Fall farm operations in some of the sec- tions laid waste by drought a few months ago. In its weekly crop report, the Weather Bureau said today that re- cent downpours were delaying the seeding of Winter grains, halting the husking of corn, impeding the harvest of potatoes, beans and sugar beets, and retarding the picking and ginning of the cotton crop. Plates $1.50 Repaired up DR. FIELD 406 7th St. N.W. Met. 9256 TOMORROW ... AT RIZIK’S “Two Individual Shops” Only one of a kind; choice for only 93 $7.50 to $15 Samples French Felts, imported Velours and Velvets—exquisite creations ... and fully half of them made to sell above $10. Black, brown, green, gray ond wine. Head sizes 2172 to 23. 1213 Rlzm 1108 F Street Connecticut NOTE—This sale at both stores! for Coughs su EDE is an accessory to the fact The fact is elegance is afoot in the mode these days. And the rich mat finish of suede gives your foot that svelte, soft look in keeping with the rest of your richly turned-out costume. Sketched, 3 stunning models from Salon Bleu. Salon Bleu, Second Floor Lamporte . . . a high- throated beauty by Palter de Liso. Inky black suede with pat- ent leather piping and | side gores Oakhill . . . interesting adap- tation of the classic oxford. Black, brown, green, gray, blue or malaga suede, 11.75 Jubilee . . . dramatic contrast of calf on suede. Black or brown with medium heel; black ‘only with high heel coac ool oolal --8.75 Correct Accent Shades in' Fine Sheer Hosiery $1.00 to $1.65 it's Vacuum Packed. and the steam cabinet, hose, shower, etc., after SIOM Limited Registration 4 Day and Evening Classes Health Club 1221 Connecticut Ave. DIstrict 3621 SCOOP! SPECTACULAR SALE 200 LADIES’ and MISSES’ Women'’s and Misses’ SUEDE LEATHER JACKETS Comparable $5.95 Quality! ® Blue, Green and Rust. 53.95 ® Many Sport Backs. Women's and Misses’ CAPESKIN LEATHER COATS $ 5.95 ® Dark Green and Cocoa! ® Kasha Flannel Lining ® 2 POCKETS and BELT Made to Sell for $7.95 MEN'S SUEDE Women's Quality Leather LEATHER JACKETS VSUEDE JACKETS st $3.98 | SEEFTT 5695 IRVING'S GREATER VALUES in FALLRIDING TOGS! Women's and Misses’ 3-Piece FALL RIDING OUTFIT Made to Sell for $10.90 Campletc L\ BOOTS alone are worth $7.95 UNUSUAL VALUE! 174 Pairs Women’s and Misses’ RIDING BREECHES and JODHPURS 14 pairs sold for $7.95 70 pairs sold for $5.95 37 pan sold for $4.95 83 pairs sald for $3.95 ALL HAVE LEATHER KNEES $2 44 AND COME IN GREEN, BROWN, RUST, BLACK AND TAN WHIP- All Wool Breeches Jodhpur Shoes _ CORD. Riding Boots __ Jodhpur Breeches _. & Ladies’ String Gloves____95¢ Riding Coats ________$7.95 Fur Felt Riding Hats . Riding Slmts = COR. IOTH and E N.W. RIDING—MILITARY—SPORTS—CAMPING VOSSR FREE PARKINGEENERER PR MET. 9601 %! " A