Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
r—-—-—-——————————- {ACID STOMACH! | English and American chemists hav ‘ developed a remarkable new combins tion of vegetable pepsin, apple nowder magnesium and silicon. Thousands of giomach sufferers are benefiing from | SORBEX_ Get $1.00 size and free cir- | Sulas. - on't wait. 2t heseate, | ‘Tear this out, call Mone: !l ' back if not benefited. | THE viTA mEALTH FOOD CO. [ | 619 12th 8t 3010 14th st | I r Delivery Call COlumbia 2980, at once. - y Washing= calling on Krajt to Ddring outmoded ‘homes wp-to-datel KRAFT OFFERS these TIMELY IMPROVEMENTS KRAFT experts can_convert old houses into smart, mod- ern Apartments—thus help- ing property owners to tai advantage of the tremen- dous rental opportunities brought about by the influx of thousands of new Wash- ingtonians every month. The Government's Defense Program provides you a golden opportunity — is YOUR property equipped to take advantage of it? It not. call DIst. 6008 or, better still come 1n and see us! KRAFT CONSTRUCTION CO. Westory Bldg. Dist. 6006 605 14th St N.W. |\ War Deparfment Gives 3‘ SUFFERERS h$2,279 fo Lengthen | » r . Mile o’ Dimes Large Contribution | May Be Exceeded Today, However ‘Though the Mile o’ Dimes yester- day received one of its largest ac- cumulated contributions from vari- | ous Government agencies and priv- | ate sources, today it is expected that this may be exceeded. | The War Department, in a single | contribution, gave $2,279.64 this year compared with $960 last year, when Brig. Gen. Albert L. Cox | placed the coins on the Mile o' | Dimes line. Actual presentation was | made by Miss Nancy Lucas, 70 Eighteenth street N.E, one of the secretaries to Secretary of War Stimson. She remarked that the | contributions were made by em- ‘ployes of the War Department. | During collection hours today it is | expected that Jesse Jones, Federal | loan administrator and Secretary of | Commerce, will be able to appear at | H.he Mile o’ Dimes stand at Four- | | teenth street and New York avenue | N.W,, to present the contributions of his employes. Other Groups to Give. | _ Today’s schedule also calls for | Miss Lillian Dotson of the Provi- dence Day Nursery, the Women’s | Club of Chevy Chase, the Casualty Hospital nurses and members of the local police force to bring contri- butions. Others expected to bring in re-| | turns are the Office of Emergencw | Management, the Federal Communi- | | cations Commission, Treasury De- | partment, Acacia Mutual Life In- | surance Co., Sears, Roebuck & Co. Emergency Hospital nurses, Je | War Veterans, Hicks’ photograp! | establishment, Probate Court, Li-| brary of Congress and the chnm-w | berlain Vocational School. The ya- | Police Department are expected tol appear in full uniform for the pres- | ) Depm!mem rious captains and inspector of the | infantile paralysis. Electric Power Co., Alfred G. Neal, | entation of the dimes of the Police and James H. Ferry, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1942. AID PARALYSIS FIGHT—Brig. Gen. Albert L. Cox (left), com- manding the Washington Provisional Brigade, and Rear Ad- miral Emory S. Land, chairman of the Maritime Commission, pictured yesterday at the Mile o’ Dimes stand. Gen. Cox brought contribution of War Department employes, and Admiral Land turned over dimeg of workers at his agency. —Star Stafl Photo. for the fight against|and general manager, The of the Potomac as the employe contribution. One of the features of the broad vice president |cast vesterday was the announce: president The 10th Year . . . A ‘Washingt[m Trad%t’ion‘ WE HELD our first “One Day Sale” in 1933. Each succeeding year the event has been repeated with increasingly brisk response. We venture the opinion that during these oflerings more well-groomed Washingtonians have purchased mare fine clothing at greater savings than during any other clothing event in the entire city. TO\TORROW is the tenth year in our urfies of “One Day Sales.” It will undoubt. edly be the greatess! Quantities are lnrm, there is more variety; md because of the pres- ent high clothing market, vdues are far greafer than ever before. vuu p]ace‘ more than $135 on the line today | ment by Wade Mitchell and Mrs. Christine McNichol, as, representa- tives of the Washington Society for the Blind. Mr. Mitchell told of the work of the society and handed over $143 for the fund “to do good some- how and somewhere.” Another rep- resentative was Dr. Belmont Farley, who gave $38.11 for the National Education Association. Children Turn in Dimes. P. F. Thomas, assistant to the owner of the Washington Laundry, placed $16.30 on the line, while a member of the Hamilton Bank Club, E. C. Halbach, turned over $15.10 for the 151 club members, Thomas G. Early, executive officer for the Office of the Co-ordinator of In- formation, added $100 to a previous contribution of $54 from that or- ganization. Mrs. Estelle Zirkin of 821 Four- teenth street N.W. gave $37 in be- half of the Soroptomist Club of the city. Another contributor was Beat- rice Kline, 10, of 1038 Fifth street Mile o’ Dimes stand to give $2 for the Reco Club and the Little Wom- | en of Zion. Annette Shapiro, 13, of 5018 Sixteenth street N.W., brought | $4.57 collected in her class, 8-B-2, at Macfarland Junior High School. Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, head of the Maritime Commission, was among the group which came to the Mile o’ Dimes stand to pre- sent the contribution of his organi- zation. However, he did not dis- close the amount collected, saying had not been counted. ‘Today only 21 per cent of the em- ployed population is engaged in ag- riculture, while 70 years ago more than 50 per cent were so employed. Wamns Constipated Folks About Lazy Liver Many doctors say constipation with its headaches, mental dullness, that nalt alive feeling often result if liver bile doesn't flow freely every day into your| intestines—so take Dr. Edwards’ Olive| ‘Tablets to insure gentle yet thorough bowel movements. Olive Tablets are simply wonder/ul to stir up liver bile - | |secretion and tone up muscular intesti-| mal action. 15¢. 30¢, 60¢. All drug stores PRICED FOR quick action TOMORROW —8 AM. to 6 P.M. FRIDAY ONLY! 361 RICHARD PRINCE SUITS 219 RICHARD PRINCE TOPCOATS 231 RICHARD PRINCE OVERCOATS Yow'll Enjoy a Wonderful Selection of Desirable Models and Fabrics: Sharkskin Suits Imported Shetland Covert Suits Drape Models Restrained Models Covert Topcoats Shetlands or Raglan Models Chesterfield 0’Coats Tweed D. B. Town 0'Coats Fine Angora O'Coats Camel Tone Coats English Tweeds and Plenty of Fly Frost, Box $ Swits English Flannel Suits high quality clothing on the present market €A COURTESY PARKING: NORTHWEST CORNER 12th awd E STS. OR STAR PARKING Regularly $37.00 to $350.00 /THE MODE 90 Ly Diiiidea! Payinent Plar AT THESE PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD A 29° An unheard-of-price for such USE F-STREET «# ELEVENTH T0 PLAZA THE IMPORTANT MEN’S CORNER 2 OR MORE GARMENTS o NOMINAL DEPOSIT RESERVES YOUR SELECTION UNTIL MARCH Ist OUR CONVENIENT 90-DAY DIVIDED PAYMENT PLAN EXTRA SALESPEOPLE AND FITTERS WILL BE ON HAND SPEED UP SERVICE N.E, who could just reach up to the | that it had been just gathered and | Girl's Brother Enfers Plea of Innocent in Kansas City Slaying Trial Is Set March 9, Anniversary of Date Body Was Found B7 the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, Jan. 20.—George ‘W. Welsh, 2d, her own good-looking brother, was accused yesterday of the shocking hammer-and-knife murder of pretty Leila Adele Welsh, 24. The 28-year-old brother quickly pleaded innocent to the county grand jury indictment returned in the crime. His trial was set for March 9, an- | niversary of the day their mother |found the girl's mutilated body in | her bed. The brother has insisted Khe was asleep on a davenport in the adjoining living room while his sister was slashed and hludgeoned. Welsh and his sister were heirs to | & real estate fortune. Returned for Holidays. For six weeks, the grand jury— called by Circuit Judge Marion D. Waltner in suburban Iridependence —dug into evidence already ex- haustively investigated by both city and county authorities. Welsh who frequently offered in- vestigating officers his help, was called before the jury soon after his retwrn for the Christmas holidays from Los Angeles where he had been working as a bookkeeper. “I hope they unearth something,” he said then. Edgar J. Fleming, uncle of Welsh | and the slair girl, described the in- dictment as “preposterous.” | “This family thought they had| suffered the lmit of grief from| Leila's death,” he said, “and this| preposterous charge against George, coming on tc) of it, is almost more | than they can bear. f=r Help Kid fn" k'A"fi" “We feel, too, it closes the door to foilowing up clues and the real so- lution we have always hoped for.” Many Clues Found. Many clues were found after the | slaying. Cigarette butts, a butcher | knife stuck nearly to the hilt in the | earth outside the bedroom window and footprints of what police be- lieved to be a small man were among them. Lear B. Reed, then police chief,| BABY'S coms Relieve misery fast —ezternally. Rubon VICKS VapoRus ' told of a bold initial in blood traced the girl's legs. Recently in writing a series of newspaper articles on the crime he said for the first time that the letter was “G.” ‘The investigation developed heat- ed rivalry between officials of the county, dominated by remnants of the old Pendergast political organ- ization, and the State-controlled police. Once Judge Waltner, in a supe plemental charge to the jury, crite icized Mr. Reed for his attitude to- ward the jury. He also criticized the manner in which Mr. Reed investi- gated the crime. fon) Saually gives prompt and ion] uun y gives prom; oy oug 14 nl 1 by hel ! J jush ous. astes. A- nething uym Cster An iron-clad (4 vl’lgp(d around esch package assu: of your money on return of empty package unless fully sutisfied. Don't take chances on aoy Kidney medicine that is not_ guaranf Don't g""u Get Cystex REGULAR *99.95 1982 oAdmiral, Phonograph With Automatic Record Changer Built-in Antenna and Admiral Lifetime Needle 09 AN ACTUAL 30 SAVING Take a Long Time to Pay A Store 1111 H St. N.E. i Sistriet 1900 Near Your Home Open T 9 P.M- $14-816 F St. N-W- 3107-3109 ™M St. N.W. WASHINGTON' (o] s LARGEST, DEALERS!,