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* 105 NEW MEMBERS HERE FOR SESSION Youngsters in House and Senate Ready for Terms to Begin. B the Associated Preps. One hundred and five new Congress- men, many of th¢m appearing self- qonscious in fresh cutaway coats, will take their seats in the House and Benate tomorrow rioon. Thirteen Demodrats, two Repub- ficans and one Fajmer-Laborite from the Senate's freshman class. Besides the 89 newcomers| in the House, six former Representajives will start the comeback trail. The new Repubflican Senators—H. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire and Henry Cabot Lodge, jr, of Massa- chusetts—are comjlarative youngsters. Firemen Help Ill Associate Cross Continent New Yorker and Wife, Hurt in West, Re- turned to Home. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, January 4.—Capt. Timothy 8. and Mrs. Costello arrived in New Cork today from Arizona and therein lies a tale of esprit de corps of firemen throughout the country. Costello, who commanded a hook and ladder company on Long Island, and his wife were injured in an auto- mobile accident near Superior, Ariz, December 19 while en route to Cali- fornia for a vacation. Costello lost his right leg, his wife's spine was broken. G After several weeks in a hospital near Superior, they expressed the desire to return to this city. Superior fire officials communicated THE EVENING STAR, WAS tellos. In Cleveland it was Dr. Geerge O'Malley, and in Buffalo still another association official tended them. Today they arrived at Grand Cen- tral Station. Three uniformed men lifted the couple to stretchers, and an ambulance took them to a hospital. e Retired Rail Executive Dies. PORTLAND, Me, January 4 (). —John W. Loud, 90, former Canadian railroad official, died at his home here yesterday. From 1900 until his retirement in 1911 Loud was freight trafic man- ager of the Grand Trunk Pacific and Central Vermont Railways. K FITas HAPPY THEIR. DEN ANN 5 N l;cy Never Neglected The ALL-VEGETABLE CORRECTIVE The New E-Z-DO 20L:-ADDR Clothes Closet M_Am..-_m,_m‘.-u,v Sty HINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1937. i presents . . Mail and Phone Orders Promptly Filled Dlst. 7200 Bridges, who pjans to resign the| ° governorship of hi State at midnight, | With the local department, and Dr. | N is 39, a one-time mety farm agent Harry M. Archer, honorary surgeon With the Roll-Up Door! 52.98 Complete With E-Z-DO Humidor and school teacher who carried New | Chief and an officer in the Interna- 1 i Hampshire twice |in the midst of | tional Fire and Police Surgeons’ Asso- | yhen Sowel oo Sioames of thet Beciated Roosevelt landslidds. ciations, reached. affiliates in various Fyimnint.hi-ny—nmhynmpmi-hm Husky and blhnt-spoken, he is | % : ave proved, 1y Nature's Resedy todsy. Get « B Costello and his wife Were tenderly | paceomomaeal” - icures Remedy today. known as a “libgral” Republican, a placed aboard s train. In Chicago | 25-tablet box— snappy dresser, rarely getting more| .~ jocenh Sullivan met the train and | only 25 centsat TO-NICHT than five hours jleep a night. He o P! 20d | any drugstore. ! can doctor a sick pig and draft com. | Tinistered to the wants of the Cos- plex legislation with equal deftness. Lodge, 34, is a| member of a top- flight family in Massachusetts soci- ety and politics. |A grandson of the late Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, he once wrote Waskhington news for a New York newspaper. New Democratic Senator. Among the new Democratic Senators are Josh Lee, cnce known to his Oklahoma neighbors as a boy orator; Gov. Clyde L. Herting of Tawo, former cow-puncher, jewplry clerk and auto salesman, and G¢gv. Edwin C. John- son of Colorado, who spent his boy- hood &s a railway section hand. Representative est Lundeen, 58, of Minnesota, whp opposed American entry into the Wqrld War, is the new Farmer-Laborite, | joining Senator Shipstead of the jame State. Like that in the Senate, the Demo- cratic majority in the House will be the heaviest of gny party since the Civil War. ‘The two younggst newcomers there ~Representatives| O'Connell, Demo- crat, of Montana and Boren, Demo- ORROW ALRICHT —You’ll wonder how you you ever did without the “Rol-a-dor” . . . it’s one of the greatest improve- ments in space-saving conveniences since people first put clothes hooks on doors. An ingenuous ge- sign—E-Z-DO combines utility and economy in as attractive a closet as you've ever seen. You’ll want to own one, and you can with the price so low. Just read these features: Easy, light, finger-tip control Works like a Roll-top Desk Full dustproof construction . 60%2 in. high; 212 in. wide; 212 in. deep Holds from 12 to 20 garments, also shoes, etc. Sturdy frame of California redwood Modern, streamlined design Expensive looking finish California Progressive. # W Among other new members are 5 o Pranck R. Haverner, lone California Progressive, who has done newspaper work in San Francisco and Washing- ton; 50-year-old Clyde L. Garrett of Eastland, Tex., vtho defeated Repre- sentative Bhnwn} long known as the “watchdog of the Treasury,” and Wil- liam S. Jacobsenn of Clinton, Iowa, who takes the seat of his late father, Representative Bernhard M. Jacobsen. | Emporia, Kanj, home town of | Publisher William Allen White, sent ! & Republican to succeed Representa- | tive Carpented, 4 Democrat. He is Ed H. Rees, a Jawyer-banker-stock- | man promoted |from the Kansas| Senate. | | Among the old-timers starting come-back careers are Representative | Ross Collins, Denjocrat, of Mississippi who attracted atiention as an advo- cate of a motorizid army, and Repre- sentative Dowel], Republican, of Jowa, noted as a parliamentarian, Many other r figures re- turned by their constituents include Representative Sabath, Democrat, of Illinois, dean of the House, who is Easily Put Together by Any One in a Few Minutes! Rol-A-Dor Closets Are Delivered Knocked Down! Semi-Annual SALE! HARDWATER SOAP. .. 0% —The time has come to buy your six months supply of this fine soap at a saving. A pure, delight- c fully fragrant soap that lathers freely in any water. In the fol-- lowing colors and odors: @ Violet odor . . . Lavender Cake ® Rose odor . . o .. Pink Cake @ Verbena odor . . . Yellow Cake @ Jasmine odor . o . Green Cake ® Bouquet odor . . . White Cake Regularly 75¢ beginning his_Sixteenth consecutive Phone term, and Rerresentative Taylor, Dist. Democrat, of Colgrado, who has seen | 27 years’ service. kwminm E. Borah, Republican, of Idaho, Senate dean, is starting his thirty-first year. 72:84 KENWOOD BLANKETS All Live Virgin Wool Special 8.9 —For the first time, the Kenwood Mills have created a special blanket for Janu- ary selling. A faultlessly woven, superbly warm blanket with the softness and lightness of higher-priced blankets. Deep, glowing colors, with edges overstitched with matching yarns. Kann's—Street Floor. Sale! Ready-Made SLIP COVERS of 2-Tone Plaid Fabrics For Chairs For Sofas Orig. $299 Orig. $399 s1.99 *2.99 —These covers are as nicely made as if custom made. Styles for standard type chairs and sofas (specify whether 76 or 84 inches long), in plaids of rust, blue, or green, with natural cord welting. @ Studio Couch Slip Covers with 3 pillow covers.___$2.99 @ Square or round back Dining Room Chair Covers_for S5 side and 1 orm chairs_ oo $3.99 Kann's—Third Floor. 12 Sq. Yds. of Inlaid LINOLEUM Double Cemented to Your Floor (In Any One Room—Anywhere Within City Limits) 521.95 —You will have your floors looking like new if you take advantage of this offer now! We will lay twelve square yards of Inlaid Linoleum (in any one room) and double cement it to the floor over felt for this low price! A nice selection of the tile and block patterns—some discon- tinued. ol € " _ p _’ Special Purchase Direct From Dalton, Ga. %v’% ) (1 ANDLEWICK " 500°COTTON el e DRESSES B st R R -‘,READS 3 off for Girls and **Teens"’’ Some Irregulars—Some Soiled $1.59 to $1.98 Values Including SAMPLES! —You’ll miss a great value if you don’t —Tt took a lot of work to get these spreads to sell at these prices now. Some few, it is true, are sub- ject to slight imperfections, such as a mismatched see this collection of dresses. Dots, ‘wear for school, for play, for every day! ‘E' . pattern or color, and some are a little soiled, but Charming, flattering styles for girls of 7 to 10. More sophisticated models for the 10 to 16. But not all sizes in all styles or colors. anni “The Avenue=Tth, 5th and O Sts.. floral prints; stripes, plain colors. The type of dresses that young girls will & EE N that does not spoil their beauty or make them less - desirable. Single or double bed sizes, with hand- tufted designs in white or colors on nice quality unbleached sheeting. Originally $3.95 to $9.95 - Now $2.60 to $6.60 Rayon Tailored Spreads —A colorful assortment, lncludlng Trapunto, quilted and fanc bordered spreads in all the desirable boudoir colors. Double-| 23'58;"12’320 NOW $2.60 to $12.95 i KANN'S STREET FLOOR. urth