Evening Star Newspaper, November 7, 1926, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TIGRISTS O OPEN ONVENTION TODAY. Palestine Relief Workers to See President and Hear Noted Jews. With more than leading Ortho- 1 dox Jews of the coun.iv in attendance, the twelfth annual convention of |lw America \\“l n'nn this three-day conference at the Jewish ommunity Center. Problem -dent to the rebuilding of Palestine as | the Jewish national refuge and home- i land will be the chief topics of discus-: sion | Dr. Chalm Weizmann, president of | the world movement, who re-| ported to President Coolidge last week on the progress being made by the 3 n Paiestine, and Rabbi Meyer Berlin, head of the Mizrachi Organiza tion, will address the afternoon session and a general mass meet.ng tonight. Both of these leaders have just re- turned from Palestine and will paint an intimate picture of the Jewish ploneers in that country. he program tomorrow includes ad- dresses by Rabbi Morris Magnes of New York, gener of Miz H \hl’m’\fim « W President Cool which the tomb oldier and will be v bancuet will be held tomorrow | T oclock at the «ommunits | kosher night af Center The Mizrachi movement represents Zionists of the Qrihodox Jewish taith | interested i the rehabilitat.on o tine as the Jewish homeland, 1 the Orthudos principle .u[ approximately | i s country, and they tablisheme and and new ment proximately POLICE TO START HEADLIGHT STUDY | Bureau of Standards Class Will Begin Wednesday Night as First Step. industrial enterprises in colonies move- world over em 2 100,000 Jews. . i | | rations for a campaign of “en ergetic and intellizent” enforcement of the automobile headlizht regula tions were started vesterday by Maj Edwin K. Hesse, police. The first step w of members of ®trnction hendlizie and cluss, composed of precinet comeiinders, lieutenants niotor eyele unl bievele men and three footnien from cach precinet, will meet at the Rureau o < Wednes day nizht at & o'clock for the initial lesson Those who undergo the instruction a1 the Bureau of Standards will be called npon to assist the precinet com manders in instructing other mem- bers of the torce who cannot be mpared to attend the special class. In- stroetions will be given at the pre- cincts o half hour prior to roll call November 1. G.0.P.LEAGUE HERE | WILL DEDICATE HOME | to Be He|d Ton\orrowl Pre 1 e to give a group | the force special in- construction Ceremony Afternoon—Women Will Have Charge of Program. Permanent the Leagne of 3 Fifteenth street tomorrow afterncon at m und. of headquarters f Republican Organizations will be dedi- | 330 | Hls Fdward A Harriman, author and lecturer on international law. will de Nver an address an “Some Menaces o ©ur Amarican Institutions The address will be followed by tea In honor of Mrs. Cuno . Rudelph wife of the retiring presi Roard of Distriet Commissioners, Mrs. Kred J. Purnell. wife of Repre- sentative Purnell of Indiana Mrs. Samuel J. Prescott, wife®f the chai of the Republican State in the District of Columbia, the hostess of the afternoon. will be assisted by Mrs. Frank Mre. AMarvion Rutler, Mrs Moore and Mrs. »»mm. Lightfoot of Republican Organ posed of the Coolidge Dawes Club Lincoln president tate Committee and Assistant am commities. SMALLPOX IS POTENT Arizona Is Heavily Hit Half of Year. Eresal Dispateh W YORK. November 1d more than its t0 The Star by "age potent < and several nEithe Canadlan provinces i th first | half of this year. If the same pr portion of de hod occurred throughout the country In the single N of A lives wo e tatal 20561 eases his conntry in the nonth period From ot Metrapoliten the large numbers of w persons both here \ nple ma « situntion that may any time lead to catustrophe. Provention of the di ease by vaceination and revaceination I8 declared vital importance to both conntries. Z0n:4 heen lost that vers Grows 15-Inch Apple. ispateh 1o The Star BALLARD. \Wast November & - Cv\ apple may keep awuy the doctor, ut Paul Rue has grown one this sea »on that it able te even ward off the rocer, the buicher and the baker. Te 18 exhibiting a green-colored eating #pple, grown his ranch. which 5 in_diaxmete Chevy Chase, D. C. 3802 Gramercy St. Detached Center-Hall Plan Stueco finish. tile roof. 7 rooms. 2 baths. an open fireplace, fine inte. ror | Sish, modern apiontment nts' quarters in hasement. built o Rarace. ocation mnexcelled Price Is $25,000.00 and 1x well finunced. Merchants Bank and Trust Company 1429 “H” Street N.W. Main 9400 uperintendent of | Town- | Dis of the, the | | Talks to Zionists loay DR. CHAIM WEIZMANN, ‘ GOLDEN AGE NEAR SAYS LABOR EDITOR Workers Readv fer 5-Day Week, | Keating Tells Members of Schoclmn's Club. fction that Amerieca is approach- he gzolden age of eiviliz elavation that American labor | tor Ay week. 4 <eating, former ress and now editor of before members of hoolmen's Club, who dinner at the City made { member of Cor Lahc said that this country has demonstrated that poverty is a preventable disease, and that the time has come when every man is entitled to and receives all cssentials and many luxur the manifold_advantages of de unionism. Mr. Keating inform- ed the educational leaders of the city thet their pre on would lend it- self to efficient unionization and ufged | them to consider the matter seriously. “Meri who do what is known as brainwork are working men just the same,” sald Mr. Keating. “News- paper writers, let me say. have never had the brains to organize.” Prof. H. D. Doyle of George Wash- ington Unlversity, president of the club, presided. A brief business ses slon preceded the dinner. RARE PORCELAINS FOUND SRLIN. November probably the greatest Chinese porcelaing in the world lain hidden in the cellars of the trea re house of the “Old Serai” of the rurkish ans in ntinople. | a . Ernst Zimmerman of Dresden, one of the world’s fore most_authorities on cerami A large part of the collection con- of Sung and Ming pieces, rang in date from the tenth to seven-| teenth Christian centuries. 1t is be- | lieved that the bulk of the art treas. ure was gathered by Sultan Soliman | the Magnificent during the middle | part of the sixteenth century IT WILL SERVI MUS Life | dent thar | recinated | wlipox hat prevailed | New Steinway Pianos are priced as low as 5875 —and may be pur- chased on accom- modating monthly payments. —— E. F. Droop & Sons Co. —‘ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., Couple Happily Married for 60 Years And Haven't Missed The Star for 36 Time’s hastening_footsteps turned back last week for Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam E. Butcher, Olympia Apartments, and through the. lens of kindly memory they saw again an October 60 years ago when they were married before an altar in shell-torn Petersburg, Va. They had known one another all lives, had played together as children, shared childish joys and sor- rows, lived in houses separated by but a few squares in the Petersburg of me the Civil War. The boy th the Confederacy, enlist- * in the %1 Virginia Infantry, and remaining in the ranks until t The girl, 2 wartime lhe home sewing, & and working. At lust the young sol- dicr came home and to k his bride, Cordelia . Slaughter. . Butcher it 81 years old now, and his wife is 79, but time has dea't kindly with them, silvering their hair and leaving them with golden memo- ries of happy yvears together. Their children, too, have prospered. On the day on which the old couple celebrated their sixtieth wedding anni. very—last Sunday--their daughter, . N -Bronson. observed the thirtieth anniversary of her marriage to William S. Bronson of Richmond. Mr. Butcher remained in Peters. burg until 1890, plaving his part in re- deeming it from the ravages of war and saving it from the perils of the reconstruction era. He came to Wash- ington October 7, 1890. The day after his arrival here, he sald. as he sat in his office where he is still actively engaged in the woolen business, he subscribed to The Eve- ning Star, and he hasn't missed an issue in the 36 years which have elapsed since he recelved his first Star. ———— APPLE CROP HARVESTED Picking Season in Frederick Coun- ty, Va., Practically Ended. Special Dispatch to The Star. WINCHESTER, Va., November 6.— Frederick pple growers vir- tually completed today the picking of the largest crop of commercial varfe- tles ever produced in their orchards, the total output being estimated by inspectors and other ‘experts at about 900,000 barrels, or, about one-third of the State's production. In many orchards apples that did not grade No. 1 were left on the trees, but most of the larger growers picked everything, selling blemished . and undersized fruit to by-product plants, for which they received fairly good prices. Two local cold storage plants, with a combined capacity of about 600,000 barrels, ave filled with' bar- veled fruit, to be withdrawn as need- ed to supply the American and for- eign markets this Winter. TILDEN HALL 3945 Connecticut Avenue Corner ilden Street—Qzverlooking Rock Creek Park An Apartment Hotel of " Refinement One Room, Reception Hall, Bath and Kitchen, com- pletely furnished, $85.00 per month. Dining Room, Living Room, Bedroom, Reception Hall, Bath and Kitchen (suitable as two bedrooms if desired), completely furnished, $150.00 per month. The ahove rates include full hotel gervice, such as linen, maid service, dishes, silverware, gas and electricity. Restaurant, Monthly Rates—Breakfast and Dinner, $37.50 Under the Madduzr, Marshall, n. M. Zirkle, Manager. Founded 1857 IF FAIRLY TREATED LAST BEYOND THE AVERAGE LIFETIME AND THROUGH. ITS SERVICE BE A CONSTANT SOURCE OF PILEASURE, COMFORT AND INSPIRATION STEINWAY “The Instrument of the Tmmortals” THE PIANO WHICH FOR GENERATIONS HAS BEEN PROCLAIMED THE WORLD’S STANDARD OF COMPARISON CE CONSIDERED: ICALLY: AT HOME: Your faithful companion. FOR YOUR CHILDREN: A heritage. .1300 G Ctreet It costs less than any other piano. Management of Moss N Mallory, Inc., Telephone Cleveland 25 It has no counterpart. We accept used i pianos as partial payment | on new Steinways | —_— The Style « GRAND —is ideal for rooms of mod- erate dimensions. | In Mahogany Only XCLUSIVE WASHINGTON DISTRIBUTORS Droop’s Music House—1300 G OVEMBER 7, 1926—PART 1. YOUR OVERCOAT SHOULD LOOK LIKE THIS Good shoulders, straight easy lines, more length; in Cedarwood tan, dusk grey or dusted blue HART SCHAFFNER & MARX make it to give you more style, more value, more wear, more satisfaction Copyright 192 Mart Schaffier & Marz Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street

Other pages from this issue: