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A—12 #x THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON @ard of Thanks. NEVILLE. CLAUDE A. We wish to thank the manv “{riends.” employers and co- workers of the Potomac Electric Power Co. the pastor and members of the Mcunt Pisgah Baptist Church and Rev Bundrant for their kind_expressions of &ympathy in_our recent bereavement NRE LOVIE IRENE NEVILLE AND FAMILY, €35 49th st. n.e. . Births. CHRISTY. MICHAEL WYNDHAM HONY RADCLIFFE. On July i London “Clinic, London to William Chestel d Dia e “Majiiand) WYNDHAM and ANTHONY FFE. See death notices. Draths. MRS. ETHEL PATTERSON RITES IN BALTIMORE Burial of Widow of Newspaper Man Will Be in Family Ceme- tery in Winston-Salem. By (he Associated Press. BALTIMORE, August 11.—Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel Mary Patterson, widow of Frank F. Patterson, for many years a member of the editorial staff of the Baltimore Sunpapers, were held here yesterday. Burial will be in the Patterson family cemetery at Winston- ASHBY. SHIRLEY JAMISON. On_ Wed nesday. Aurusi 11. 1937. at her resi- | dence. Remingion. Va. SHIRLEY JAMI- SON ASHBY (nee Rouse). beloved moth- er of Alice. Sh Walden and Willa June Ashby ces at ih residence on Th August 12, at 2 Interment in Remington. Va. * | JOSEPHINE. _ On Tucsday JOSEPHINE ASH Yo beloved daug William H_and Kat herine Ashton, Rel Au- of e | | ve- Zo'and Goidie Athlon by _many other i She Ak s sur | relatives ot Marvan & | J_ave. and R Nofice ‘of funeral o be. an- nounced later. @TKINSON. « AuRust Macka)l ATKINSON. wife 0f Atkinson_and. sist G on hex Vi Wednesday. residence. | WIRGINIA t Gawe rxrh.urv | e AL 100N T g oAl Cemetery. 19 H_C. On Monday. August RAH C_.BARBER. aged | ne. beloved wife Rema funeral 1onal lARmn : cun R Barbe v Deal ner Church: near end BL l(‘kBl RN. A invited. SHIRLEY MAE. On Mon [ SHIRLEY \"\F 1 ment, l)mox R 16 Harmony Cemetery L ARCHIE £ Op Sunday. Augist ARCHI BROOKS. ' brother Heien uncle of Mrs n Virginia and Testing at 2 R I ave 125t E on Memorial ALICE BAKER. Deparied “ALicE BAKE‘R this 1 Warfeld Baptist Con BUTLER. ETHEL I August THEL ved CABON. JOHN. On i > of Mallls an devoted husband of Rib: also is survived by one Pansy o m Chester and " iher Maitland). hsed eleht | On Mondsy 937, at 11:45 pm.. at Hospital. THOMAS B. COBB o nw. beloved husband Remains <0 August hl‘K\IOD\ IULIA R ust_10.'19: E e Cemeters. I TG WILLIAM 1u»~ at his residence . WILLIAM DOUGHERTY Mary E. Kerr. Funera above residence on Fri- day us at Il am. Interment | Cedar Hill Cemetery | DOWNES. dar. Ausuet Hospital A brother of Sarah D Bhdle ot Rote Deaten sna Mars W Remains _ resting at 150 R ave. funeral later Fox. [:-m\ A G on Auguist 10, Monroe st father of | 4| | FREEMAN. NATHANIEL. Pavne's Ceme: BACKLEY. MINNIE Monday’_ August Bur Vx SHRNTE HACKLEY. detoted wite o | Odana Hackley. loving mother of Odana ir: Deloise. Cland and Conrad Hackley: er of James and Catherine Bush She als0 leaves othel ves and many {riends. Remains r t the John T. Rhines funeral cha and Eye s s Funeral T August 17 B from The Mount Pleaant Bantist Church. Florise. Va.. Rev. Hill officiat- ing. - Interment church cemetery. 11 BEALY. MICHAEL A._On Tuesday, August i al _Providence EALY. chlmsd 3 at chae and Alice | Heaty (nee” Russell). “Hemuins restirre o5 the residence of his sister. Mrs. Elizabeth A Poston of Randolph st. n.w. Notice of funeral hereafter. 13 IF\L\ Ml(lln:lI AP OndTueid;V“Aulufl at Providence Hospital MICHAEL A REALY beloved son of the late Michael J. and Alice Healy (nee Russell). Funeral will be held from the Tesidence of his sister. Mrs. Elizabeth A, Poston. 331 Randoiph'st. n.w.. Saturday. August 14, at 830 am. High requiem mass at St. Peter's Church at 9 am Relatives and friends invited. Intarment Mount Olivet Cemetery 13 JORDAN. ROBERT B. On Friday. Ausust 7. aUPittsburgh. Pa.. ROBERT B.. %on o the lats Remert 1 ma Py ¥ Jordan ‘and " brother of Mrs. Blanche Dunnington Interment Homewood Cemetery. Pittsburgh . JOSHUA. _JOSEPHINE. Departed life on Sunday. August K. 19:1 Tesidence. 216 Eve 8t. 5., JOSHUA Charles J this at JOSEPHINE and Prederick Joshua. relatives and friends. anrrl! < al her ate’ residence on “Thirs: August 17. at p.m.. Rev. Westrey SMciating. Interment Rosemont comey fery KEARNEY. ADA BURKE. On Wednesday. August 11. 1937 ADA BURKE KEARNEY of Norwalk. Conn.. devoted wife of Sam- Uel P. Kearney and the daughter of the late Lee and Belty Burke of Lynchburs. Ya' Besides her devoted husband. she lagves to mourn their | iovinz sis- .g" zinia B Brown of R Washington. D, C.: & foster daugh: (IR Grace B Basiey of Notwalk. Conn 8 niece. Marie B. Davison. and a grand- Elece. Virginia C. Davison. both of this ity She also leaves other relatives and & host of friends. Funsral to be held in Rorwalk. Gonn.. Priday. Ausust 13. | salem, N. © | TULLY, ALBERT MICKLER Mrs. Patterson, who was 65, died | yesterday after an iliness of several { months. She was born in Frederick County, Md., and spent most of her life in Baltimore. She is survived oy a sister, Mrs. Stella T. Holland of | Chicago. Mrs. Patterson’s husband died in 1933 after serving for many years on the staffs of both the Sun and the Evening Sun. 7 Dratha. N. ANNA E. On Tuesdav. Au- at her residence. 1238 ANNA E. KLEINHENN beloved wife of Otio Klein- d_aunt of Estelle Gibson Beck. | g from the “above residence on | Thursday, August 12 at 830 am. Re- | m mass at St. Anthony's Church at | am_ Intermeni Mount Olivet Ceme- ters. Relatives and friends are invited. | KRAJICERK, SUSAN M 1 ), 1937, al On Tuesday. Providence Hospi KRAJICEK_ beloved wife of | cesiaus Kralicek, ™ Funeral from ner [ e. on Au- | HOI Comtorter"Church. wheve | be offered at 0 am. Relatives | \de invited. Inferment Mount | Bliver Cometers LARSON. ANNA L. Opn 10,1937, 8t sibles L LARSON. the beloved wite of Jacon T Lation and et oy Breatich trude “and Dorothy Larson. . She 35 curvived by eisht erandchiidren and our great-grandehildren. Remains rest- | ine at her lnte residence. 860 Van Buren | Stnw CFuneral services at the Takoma Evaneelical Lutheran. Church. 7th. and Dai on' Friday August 15 Relatives and friends are - | Imerment Washington Memorial | 12 Tuesdav. Aucust Memorial Hospital nnnc-r w 111057 Military rd. n w beloved h On Wednesday. S ahis Tesidence i34 ERNEST W. LE GRYS. | soand of Gertrude Te Grys | { Emma M. Le Grys. Re- | the W. W. Deal funeral | t. ne. Interment Cam- Col. John J Astor Camp. United Spanish War Vet- Tegrels to announced the of Comrade WILLTAM Y. Tuesday. August 0. T Home Hospital Soldiers” Home pel. Thursdas. Angust 1o at Burial at Soldiers Home LYONS ust 1:3 the ahove home Douglass Ci MARKS. GEORGIA M st 10, 10047 RGIA M te S, A al Gntermant y 11 Suddents. an T Colonial n»zm VARKS. beloved Mark { | supply her mother had left her would D. C., WEDNESDAY DEATH DEADLINE' ONLY 15 MINUTES Time Stands Still That Long for Each of Us After We Are Dead. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 13.—It's just 15 minutes to eternity. Time stands still that long for each of us just after we die. Only 15 minutes. A quarter of an hour. Anything can happen in those 15 minutes. A baby may be born, from a dead mother, as one was last week in Phila- delphia. A man may die, and come back to life. All science knows about those mys- terious minutes is that they are there. That has been proved hun- dreds of times. Life has gone, and | returned, within that span. But rec- ords at the New York Academy of Medicine show that 15 minutes is the deadline. Baby Fanny Boccassini had those | 15 minutes in which to be born after her mother died of tubercular menin- gitis in Philadelphia. The oxygen last that long after the mother's heart had stopped. the academy said. | Asphyxiation would come when that | time passed. Minutes to Spare. Doctors delivered Baby Boccassini | alive by Caesarean section with min- utes to spare, although the infant died later. Why is it 15 minutes, and not 10, or 12? No one kno except that it seems | man’s nerves can remain unimpaired | just that long after his heart stops| beating. or his breathing ceases. At least 500 persons in the United | States are witnesses to the 15-minute | | rule. That many have returned to | |life in New York and Chicago alone after being declered dead. Medical authorities have estimated that 50.000 more could similarly be revived each | vear if the methods were well enough known The best known case of a “dead man who came back is John Pucker- | ing of Birmingham, England His life was restored five minutes after | his heart was silent. When he was conscious again he described a “beau- | tiful land” he had visited and said | he wished he had stayed there. | Restorations of life are attempted only when physicians expect a com- | plete recovery. No one ever has been | brought back from death caused by | a wasting disease. No doctor ever | tried it i Sudden Deaths Reversed. Sudden deaths are the ones usually reversed. They normally result from sudden blockage of the heart or lungs. | Angina pectoris is like that. S5 is thrombosis. carbon mon- | | gas, drowning, anesthesia, some infec- home Notice of fu- | neral later PIERCE, WILLIAM A, On Tuesdas 10, al his_residence. 1 VILLIAM A. PIERCE. the late Mary M. | dence | oot am mn« at Bt. Michael's Md. at 9 am. Relat )\o(‘ vited. Interment Mount y. Kindly omit flowers K F. Departed thi life Tuss. ter a brief He leaves to wife. Rosa Levia "Rov Bailey: a and many other friends. Remains resting Matthews' funeral home, ice of funeral later. | NCENT. _Suddenly at his se “he be- and our a Jackson ster Robert Roy. brother. relatives YMOUR, THOMAS V¥ on Monday 2 p.m. Rela- fr m—m fnvlted. Thterment | On Tues- LUC!LLE VIR- \hr belovad wife of Remains resting at the W | bers Co. Southeast funeral | J1th st se. until Thursday p.m._ Services and 1n- i Rorfolk.Va SMITH. OLIVE Passed awav on Mon- dav. August 9. 1027, at Gallinger Hos- a_ brief iliness. OLIVE V. > Syphax) She is survived daughter and five sons Funeral day. Augnst 12, at 2330 pn om McGuire's funeral home. ~Frinds ed. Suddenly. Monday. August 9. at_George: University Hospital. ALBERT mrKLr-‘u} TULLY. beloved son of James F. and Evanaeiine Tuily, - Funeral from his Iate | residence. 5341 42nd st n.w.. on Thurs- | day. Auebst 17 at 830 am. Mass of | {2 angels at the Shrine of the Blessed | Sacrament at % am. Relatives and friends are invited. " Interment in Mount | Olivet Cemetery. WATKINS, MRS NEI Tuesday. August 10 ot e on Letter Wi Lewisdale. Sa " Sre s NEETE FRANCES WaATRING widow of J. Grant Watkins. Remains resting - at the Beall funeral home, Da- mascus. Md. Funers] will be held from the Bethesda M. E. Church. Brownines- ville Md.. on Thureday. August 12. at p.m. Interment will be in’ the irch cemetery WILLIAMS. ANNIE. Departed this life on Saturday, Augusi 7. 1937 at_Gallinger Hospital. ANNIE WILLIAMS. She leaves to mourn their loss a devoted friend. William _Allen: a loving sister, Mamie Washington: one niece Coleman: 1wo nephews. James and © Washineton. and a h other' relatives and friends 7 A Gardner & Poe's funeral home 4th st s.w.. wheve funeral services Wi belneld Thuredny. Augas 17, 8¢ pm. Rev. Herbert officiating. Inter- ment Payne's Cemetery. JOSEPH. On Saturday. Augnst JOSEPH WILSON. ~Rzmains resti the W, W "Chambers "Co. Southeast funeral ho st Se. Funeral services at neral home on, TEursday thence to St rch. 10th and G sts. n.w will be said at O am. for the repose of his soul. Relatives and friends invited. Interment Mount Olivet | Cemetery. In Memoriam. AMBROGI. ERMINDO. In sad but lovin femembrance of our dear father an d. ERMINDO AMBROGIL who left e Years ago 1oany God only loaned you to us for a while. Now we are lonesome for your love and sweet smile. The angeis came down and took you awa n B | NEITIE FRANCES. oOn | X the ‘home (‘a(h And feft us still lonely for you today. HIS LOVING WIFE AND CHILDREN. * CALLIS. ROY N. 1In loving Jemembrance of ‘our beloved son and brother. ROY N. CALLIS, ‘who left us one vear ago PR August 11, 1936, THE FAMILY. DOHERTY, ALVIN E. In loving remem- brance ‘of ‘my dear son. ALVIN E. DOHERTY. who departed this life twelve years ago today. August 11, 1925, In memory 1 ofttimes see The L ioved so de, The vislon &rows. so. ¢lo I feel he must be near metimes MOTHER. GASKINS. JOSEPHINE AMOK. In memory of JOBEFHINE AMOBS GASKINS. who en- tered into et rest four vears August 11 AMILY. WALDEN, ISABEL C. Hacred Lo the mem- ory of my aur wife and our m TSABELC. WALDEN "who latt vears ago today, August 11, 19 A miother who kave us the hm “of her e. x s aix Who cherished our secrets, our sorrows, our strife; Who taught us to love, who taught us to A mm{wr in heaven, God bl!l! her |odny HUSH, HILDRE AND AND wi, so\. ROBERT rAl.l'l:l. In aad hut lovins memory of our dear fatnef, ROB, zhu x&"a l‘rfit """‘5'% U%fi!&‘i‘ fl’ ) | 1865 and graduated in 188 from the | & Co. as a junior clerk. | tions. infantile paralysis, mechanical | suffocation, pulmonary complications, | lung collapse, drug poisoning and | urns. | When the lungs are blocked the | | doctors resort to insufflation, a method | of feeding mixtures of oxygen and| carbon dioxide into the lungs under | pressure. Insufflation has brought back life to babies who have been pronounced dead. When the heart stops beating it is started again with injections of adien- alin or caffein, or stimulated with an electric needle of gold. The injections cause a shock that starts the human motor moving again. The needle is able to do the same because after | | heart action halts, that organ becomes rapidly acid and acid is a good elec- trical conductor. This is proof that man does ot die all at once. His brain disintegrates first. Internal organs, like the liver, live on for hours. Hair follicles sur- vive for days. But when the nervous | system is injured, you are gane. That seems to happen in 15 minutes, FREDERICK STRAUSS, BANKING PARTNER, DIES Expert on Railroad Reorganiza- tion Succumbs to Heart At- tack—Was Bachelor. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 11.—Frederick Strauss, 72, for many years a partner in the bflnkmg firm of J. & W. Selig- man & Co., died at his home here to- | day of a heart attack. He was a di- rector of Electric Bond & Share Co., Radio Corp. of America, Tri-Conti- nental Corp. and National Brodacast- ing Co. He was born in New York City in College of the City of New York. After working for four years with a small ex- port firm he- joined J. & W. Seligman Strauss was regarded as an expert on railroad reorganization and par- ticipated in readjustment of the St. Louis-San Francisco R. R., the Pere Marquette, Missouri - Kansas - Texas, International Great Northern and others. In 1910 and 1911 he was vice president of the Railroad Securities Commission, appointed by President Taft to recommend carrier legislation to Congress. He was unmarried. _ FUNERAL DIRECTORS. J. William Lee’s Sons Co. FUNERAL l)l'll'CTOlS Crematorium 4th and Mass. Ave. N.E. _ Lincoin 5200 Jo uEh F. Birch’s Sons CK, Manager) Phone West 00904 Ot Ertabiimed 18413034 M St. N. W Frank Geier’s Sons Co. Jii38evenn st % National2473 V. L. SPEARE CO. elther the successor to nor connected with (e ofteina) W R, Bpeats ¢atablisament. National 2802 "1009 H'St. N el One or the Largest Undertakers in the World 1400 Chapin St. N.W. Col. 0432 517 11th St. S.E. Atlantic 6700 918 Cleveland Ave., Riverdale, Md. 2 !‘UN!!AI. DEGIGNV& BURTON'S ) als. wird, Beautitul P i) 34 AT. 171 °&%’j.‘;¥#§fl%' +GEOC. C. C. SHAFFER and Sundays Cor. 14th G Eye GUDE BROS. CO. Floral Pisces 1313 P ot X, Nattona! ¢576 |BANKRUPTCY MEASURES 'Huune Approves Bills Designed to | northeast, FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOR GILBERT E. VAUX, 34 Former District Resident Died Friday in Westport, Conn. Funeral services for Gilbert E. Vaux, 34, former Washington resident, who died Friday at Westport, Conn., were held yesterday in Oak Hill Cemetery Chapel, with burial following in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Vaux was the brother of Mrs, C. Wendel Shoemaker, 4848 Wiscon- sin avenue. Until becoming ill about 18 months ago, he was a bond sales- man in New York. Mr. Vaux lived in this city when a boy and after- ward visited here frequently. Besides his sister here, he leaves his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Houston Vaux, Westport, Conn.; his parents, Alfred M. Vaux and Mrs. Mabel A. Vaux, and another sister, Miss Eddis M. Vaux, all of Queens Village, N. Y. SEVEN SAW LOCKS AND ESCAPE JAIL Cecil County Prisoners Then Scale 30-Foot Wall in Early Morning. By the Assoclated Press, ELKTON, Md, August 11.—Seven prisoners escaped from the Cecil County Jail here early today after saw- ing two locks off a door and climbing & 30-foot stone wall around the jail yard. Deputy Sheriff Lewis A. Seth, who discovered the jail break, said the prisoners escaped between 3 and 4 o'clock this morning. ‘The fugitives were awaiting action of the September grand jury on | charges ranging from robbery to at- tempted murder. The fugitives against each are: Hampton Hall, | tempted murder. Gilbert Faulkner, 18, colored, Balti- | more, robbery. Braddord Mayberry, 25, assault with intent to kill. Adolphus Campbell, 18, assault with intent to kill Blaine Burchett, 24, robbery. Sigman Yarmurst, 18, robbery. Edward Rider, 25, robbery. Believed Headed to Baltimore. Sheriff Eugene Racine notified State and local police of the nearby sections and the charges 30, holdup and at- ARE SENT TO SENATE Aid Investors in Shaky Corporations. By the Associated Press. House approval sent to the Senate vesterday two bankruptcy measures designed to protect investors in finan- cially-distressed corporations. One is the 212-page Chandler bill revising the bankruptcy code for the first time since 1898. The other is the | of Maryland, Pennsylvania and Dela- Sabath bill authorizing the Securities | ware to be on the lookout for the Commission to aid Federal courts in | administering the bankruptey law re- | lating to reorganization of corpora- tions. In some respects the bills overlap. Both authorize the commission to ad- vise the courts on fairness of reor- ganization plans and to intervene to| protect investors. ABRAHAM KRUPSAW Short Iilness Fatal to Man Resi- | dent in D. C. Since Childhood. | Funeral services for Abraham Krup- saw, 50, president of the American Bedding Co.. Fourth and Bryant streets were to be held at 2 pm today at the residence, 4409 Fifteenth street, where he died yesterday after a short illness. Burial was to follow in | Ohev Sholem Cemetery. A native of Russia, Mr. Krupsaw had been a resident of the District since early childhood. He belonged to the Samuel Gompers Lodge of Masons. SINCE 1855 OUPONT CIRCLE "DOCTORS RECOMMEND AMBULANCES $ 3 any place in the city Phone COlumbia 0432 One of the Largest Undertakers in Vorl What About Price? Funerals cannot be sold in exactly the same manner as merchandise, since the chief item is the service. The family alone names the price, based entirely upon what they wish to pay, what type of service and merchandise they desire. However, we give positive assurance that when the family desires we are equipped to furnish funerals as low in price 412 H St. N.E. as any establishment which advertises price. More impor- tant, though, our service is superior in every detail. WM. H. SARDO & CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Lincoln 0524 /A / 7 one of the finest a: is no reason why i B cerely helpful service re that's paid. Word Phowe the Last Service. The highest type Funeral se vice within the means of a/l ECAUSE our service is recognized as being vailable in Washington t should be within the means of just a few. To all who come to us will be given the same complete, capable, sin- egardless of the price Remember to call Ryan Service., Ryan De Luxe Ambulance Service Ambulance 1700. in Atlantic James T. Ryan Funmeral Director 317 Pa. Ave. S.E. ATlantic 1700-1701 A DESERVING TRIBUTE TO A’ DEPARTED FRIEND Cross of Assorted Flowers You can send this \ tribute confident of its \ appropriateness . . . assured of its expres- \ siveness, thoughtful- ness. *10% \ \ \ & C rLower stores 804 {7th §t. N.W. 808 {4th St. N.W. 603 (2th St. N.W. 41 F St N.W, AUGUST 11, 1937. fugitives. He believed some of them were headed toward Baltimore. Deputy Sheriff Ellwood Racine, son of the sheriff, said he heard a loud noise in the jail when he was going home about 2:10 a.m. and entered the building to investigate. The only source of the noise, he said, was water that was turned on full blast at all the faucets. Deputy sheriff Seth entered the jail about 6 o'clock and discovered the heavy iron grated door from the pris- oners’ cell room to the jail yard had been sawed open. Most of the pris- oners remaining, he said, did not know of its being open. Two locks had been locked on the outside of the door, Seth said. The staples holding the locks had been sawed off. He said the prisoners ap- parently had put their hands through the grates and used a saw on the ataples. When he tried to react his version of the escape, he could hardly get his hands through the grating. He did not know how the prisoners got the saws. The deputy said the fugitives made an improvised rope from blankets and must have boosted one of their num- ber to the top of the 30-foot wall with the rope. He believed this ont‘ then helped the other six over the wall. The prisoners being held for action | of the grand jury are kept in a large room in the jail. The doors of the | not locked, but large locks are used on the doors to the room. MEMORIAL RITES HELD FOR DR. V. L. KELLOGG Distinguished Washington Scien- tist Will Be Buried in Mon- terey, Calif. By the Associated Press. HARTFORD, Conn., August 11.—A memorial service for Dr. Vernon Lyman Kellogg of Washington, D. C., distinguished scientist who died here Sunday, was conducted yesterday in Trinity College Chapel by President Remsen B. Ogilby. ‘Two former United States Senators, Frederic C. Walcott, now Connecticut welfare commissioner, and Jesse H. Metcalf of Rhode Island, were a guard of honor. Among those present was Perrin Galpin of New York City, sent by former President Herbert Hoover to represent the Belgian Relief Commis- sion, on which Dr. Kellogg served dur- ing the war. The body of the 69-year-old zoologist, a former professor at Stanford Uni- versity and for many years secretary of the National Research Council, was sent to Springfield, Mass., for cremation after the service, Burial ( will be in Monterey, Calif. Locomotives Burn Wood. Railway locomotives in Finland burn | cells along the sides of the room are 'a large amount of wood. consumption | 1,600,000 | in the last year totaling ‘cubic meters of firewood. JAMES W, GINNATY Retired Publisher Is Buried in Mount Olivet. Funeral services were held in Sacred Heart Catholic Church today for James W. Ginnaty, 75, retired adver tising man and publisher, who died Monday in Georgetown Hospital after & long illness. Burial was in Mount Olivet Cemetery. Mr. Ginnaty formerly was pub'isher of the Newark (N. J) Labor Leader and also of police magazines and other periodicals here. He had retired from active business about 12 years ago. His home was at 1357 Otis place. His widow, Mrs. Mary R. Ginnaty, and daughter, Miss Marion A. Gin- naty, survive, Milburn T. ZIRKLE Co. 'UNERAL DIRECTORS Ambulance Service 510Cat NE. Linc. 5537 North Side of Stanton Park. @dar ashinglovs mest B emetewrinfi Community Mausolesm_ Columbarizm Receiving Vault LOANE’S =7 Twelith §t =— zzqwz‘c-j;/e New arrivals that add increasing interest to this mid-year event—augmenting the variety in an oc- casion that is already store-wide in its scope. You will find a visit filled with interest as you go through the floors noting the deep reductions that prevail on Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, etc., represent- ing the best in production. Grassing table a Bedroom Groups sion of the Colo reau and chest are of e low four pc;fl'. knee-hole Regular Price $330 The Comstock genuine Hond hanging n the Colonia! with pieces including twin beds to mahogany; Eight —True Regular Price $305 The Wheatle mahogany. Draw Chi :ng\jr\a in de carved gold finished { in gen- the famous $280 of 5255 The sign A revival of the Federal I design in genuine Honduras fronts and head boards of the twin beds decorated with carved spread eagles and sheaves of wheat. The hanging mirrors are combination of gil twin beds Regular Price $320 _ Li The Gadsb burg Sofa duras mahogan is tailored " in estn Regular Price $245 In muslin cover w the lobor to tailor with cover of your selection. Regular Price $160 The Fairfax Sofi ment of the stock of this popu’r" model. luxuriously Tailored in 18th Century graceful and fortable brocatelle Regular Price $155 Finished in muslin with the price in- cluding cost of labor in applying fabric of your selection. Regular Price $125 Persian Sofa—A memory rendition of the fam The base is solid Hon- tan- t and mahogany. Eight pieces including $2770 iving Room Pieces The Westover Easy Chair—One of the most popular of the read- ing models. Tailored $59 in tapestry Regular Price $78 In muslin cover the price includes the cost of applying the fabric of your selection. Regular Price $60 -$49 hyfe gen- 45 Table—Following the with double clow feet. $15 15 Williams- The floor piece $208 ith price including Console Table—Duncan pedestal base design uine Honduras ma- hogany Regualr Price $53.50 Cocktail Duncan Phyfe line: pedestal base. Bra Genuine Honduras mahogany. Regular Price $18.50 a—A repl Charming! $132 “High Lights” Among the Oriental Rugs Sarouk, Kermanshoh and Chinese—in room and scatter sizes. $325 Persian Sarouk—size 12 o ccocacamemmeee ey $350 Persian Kermanshoh—size 9x12 $330 Chinese—siz, $69 Persian Saroul e Ox12 Scatter Sizes k—size 3x5 $115 Persian Sarouk—size 4x7------ SE o St S SN $24 Chinese—siz $4950 Chinese—size 3x5 $16.95 $32 e 2x4 $95 Chinese—size 4x7-ccammaaemv Dining Room Furniture The Yorktown Group—ten pieces. One of the best expressions of Sheraton- Colonial; the construction of carefully selected genuine Honduras mahogany. Regular Price $262 Early American Maple Pieces At August Prices From open stock you can make any wanted selection of these Early Ameri- can Cining Room pieces; GENUINE rock maple. At August Sale prices. W.&]J.SLO 711 Twelfth Street