Evening Star Newspaper, June 9, 1930, Page 7

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)

THE EVENING ANNETTE'S PERFECT CLEANSER - 50c 3 together between Four fingers and brush carefully. 4 tim, CANNOT LEAVE ARING Real Estate Loans (D. C. Property Only) No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay oft your loan without the expense of renewing. $1.000 for §10 per month, including interest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. Perpetual Building Association Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets Over $22,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. MES RERRY. President BALTZ. Secrelary The spirit of service animates the modern wai ear please. . performing her tas swiftly ‘and pleasantly. Service promptly given with a smile is the credo of the Home Laundry. Try our modern methods and you will wonder why you ever tolerated wash-day blues! HOME LAUNDRY Phone ATlantic 2400 Summer Vacation Excursiens At Special Low Rates From WASHINGTON, D. C. To New Orleans, Edgewater Havana, Cuba. on June 14th, 28th July 12th and 26th August 9th, 23rd, 1930 Good to return within thirty days. For reservations and tickets, call on S. E. Burgess—D. P. A, McPherson Square Phones National 1465-1466 Washington, D. C. Southern Railway System INCREASE RADIO ENJOYMENT ‘... That's why you should use RCA Radio- trons in every socket,” Say Engineers YOUR radio reception will be a revelation to you if you install RCA Radiotrons! These are the quality tubes that triumph over disturbing warm weather noises and put new wvigor into every broadcast pro- gram. See your RCA Radiotron dealer today. RCA Radiotrons THE HEART OF YOUR RADIO SET | | tion, | head yestera: GRADUATES TOLD VALUE OF SERVE {Dr. Sizoo Recalls Lincoln in Sermon to Southcastern University Class. Men do not become famous for their ' wealth or because of selfish achicve- ments, but for the services they render | mankind. Rev. Dr. Joseph R. Siz00, pas- | tor of the New York Avenue Presby- | | terian Church, told graduates of South- eastern University and affiliated schools of the Young Men's Christian Associa- in a baccalaur-ate address last | night from his pulpit. Nobody rememb'rs who was the i richest man in Washington during the | Civil War. and nobody cares, the clergy ed out, but the world remem- © his contributions_to the welfare of his fellow man. Fow | persons could name the mest_powerful ruler in the time of Jesus Christ, he sald. for the record of that era is { chifly the record of Christ's carcer. Only the burden bearers with un- | derstanding and _sympathetic minds | survive in history.” Dr. Sizoo declared | A life of service is to be preferred to | &ny other kind of carcer. the young ! men and women were advised | Nearly a hundred prosp-ctive grad- | uates of the university’s School of Law | and School of Accountancy and of the Washington _Preparatory School and Woodward School for Boys attended the service. Allired in caps and gowns } ched into the church | procession. Members of officials of the universit | and friends and relatives also were pres:nt. The commencement ceremonies will be held Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in Memorial Continental Hall. Huston Thompson, former chairman of the | Federal Trade Commission and presi- | dent of the board of trustees of the Southeastern University, will preside. Dr. William Knowles Cooper, former | | general secretary of the Young Men's | Christian Association, will deliver the commencement addre: U. S. LEADS WORLD | | IN POWER VOLUME “Produces Kilowatt of Electricity‘ for Every 1.4 Kilowatt Gen- i erated Elsewhere. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, June 9—A survey of the electric light and power industry throughout the world, issued today by the investment banking firm of Pynchon & Co. nd covering all nations, shows an estimated annual production of elec- tricity at 300,000,000,000-kilowatt hours Of this volume the United States contributes an estimated 125 billion kilowatt hours, or 1 kilowatt hour for each 1.4 kilowatt hours generated by all other countries combined, equal to | 41 per cent of the total. | Germany is second and Canada third. ; BOY CUT IN CRASH Hurled Into Windshield When Second Car Hits Rear. ‘Ten-year-old William Fitzpatrick of | er Spring, Md. was cut about the afternoon in an acci- dent at Sixteenth and Lamont streets, when he was catapaulted into the wind. Si . driven by the youngster" Mrs. Bessie Fitzpatrick, wa: awaiting a traffic light change, when an awtomobile driven by Clyde Manley, | colored, 32 years old, of 2370 Champlain street, crashed into the rear of her | machine. The boy was taken to the office of a private physician and given first-aid treatment. {COLE IS TRANSFERRED FROM POST AT WARSAW Recent changes in the United States foreign service include the transfer of Felix_ Cole, Washington, D. C., consul general, from Warsaw to Frankfort-on- | the-Main: the promotion of Merritt | Swift of Washington, D. C., second sec- retary of legation at Vienna, to th grade of first secretary at that post; | the transfer of James E. McKenna of Massachusetts, consul at Canton, to| the Department of State; the transfer of Avra M. Warren of Ellicott City, | Md., consul, from St. John's, Newfound- | land, to Buenos Aires; the transfer of | Charles D. Westcott of Philadelphia, consul, from the Department of State to Tenerife, Canary Islands, and the | resignations of F. L. Belin of Pennsyl- | vania, first secretary of embassy at | London; F. F. A. Pearson of New York, | second secretary of legation at Vienna; | Albert E. Kane of New York, consul at | Halifax, N. §., and James M. Hill of | Kentucky, vice consul at Li J STAR WASHINGTON D. C., MONDAY, A7 MPA SPONSORS AT REUNION hese pretty girls attended the fortieth annual at Biloxi, Miss., as sponsors from Tampa, Fla. - n of Confederate sociated Press Photo, rew From the Front Row Reviews and News of Wasl’lington.s Theaters. “Jazztime Revue,” Like Yeast, Has the Vitamin D. HE Gayety has a revue this week which furnishes gladness to the burlesque happy hunting grounds. It is a precocious bit of mirth en- titled “Jazztime Revue” and seems to produce roar upon roar in a pavilion sometimes noted for its cal- lousness, A new and devastating sylph-like apparition, Miss Erin Jackson, is responsible for much of the joy. In her evolution number, “That Blue Streak of Jazz” in mimicking Mother Eve, she demonstrates a talent that is not difficult to under- stand—talent that seemingly sat pleasingly on last night's audience. FINLAND’S PROHIBITION IS HELD UP AS FAILURE Association Against Amendment Issues Pamphlet De- rogatory to “Volstead Echo.” By the Associated Press. Under the title of “Finland's Prohibi- tion: An Echo of Volsteadism,” the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment has issued a pamphlet | showing liquor situations “astonishingly alike” in the North European republic and the United States. violation: the association said, “sales of industrial alcohol, onvictions for drunkenness, crime convictions and sei: res of illicit liquor since Finland adopt- ed prohibition, in 1919, are shown in offi- cial statistics compiled in this field study, which was made by an American. university professor of Finnish nativit. In this Baltic republic prohibitionists still say that prohibition has not had a fair t after 10 years, and prote: against any national referendum on it.” Eighteenth | Bobby Nissen, permanent lumi- nary of the Summer season, whose admirers are legion, again wrung cheers from the populace with her effervescent blondine personality. Three other Ninth Street mermaids who seemed on the crest of the waves were Syd Burke, Elsie Huff and Boots Rush. The comic interludes are well in- terspersed throughout by “Fat” Hiatt and Lou Costello. Further evidences of the sunshine vitamin are supplied by the indefatigable Hap Fryer, Joe Moss and Harry Ryan. All'in all, the revue passes with a lightning rapidity that dazzles even more a spellbound audience. STAGE STAR MARRIED Roscoe Ails and Shirley Dahlman Wed in Presence of Players. NEW YORK, June 9 (#).—Roscoe Alls, actor in Broadway musical shows, and Shirley Dahlman, dramatic actress, were married yesterday at noon at the | Central Park Casino in the presence |of many celebrities of the theatrical and sporting world. They departed yesterday afternoon ! for Russels Point, Ohio, home of Mr. Alls, where they will spend their honey- moon. | s in prohibition .50 Gal. Pee Gee's House Paint—Any Color. Ked Koof Paint $1.45 gal. 3 BRANCHES ©75C Sts SW S2&FleAve NE 5021 Ga Ave NW WORKMEN OF WELDIT CO. WELDING THE TAIL ON BUFFALO, AT QST. BRIDGE. Did somebody bump your car and break your bumper? Horrid thought! Don't worry, we will W “LD it for $1.50. When it's a question of saving your money on broken articles we are the Kingfisk. Cracked engine heads, motor blocks, heating boilers, etc., all come under this classifi- cation. Weldit Co., 516 First St. N.W. Metropolitan 2416 Order it by Name if you want to be sure of the genuine big loaf It shows the skill of the Master baker in the smooth, even texture—with the crisp crust brought to a rich golden brown. Itll re- mind you of that delicious bread “mother used to make.” Every slice another—it’s so good. an invitation to eat At All Grocers’ and Delicatessens The Dorsch Bakery is a 33-year-old Washington institution—owned and operated by the Master Baker himself 2 BANDTS KILED BY NCARACUANS U. S. Marines in Charge of Forces Scouring Hills for Outlaws. By the Associated Press MANAGUE, Nicaragua, June 5. —Gen. Douglas McDougal, commander of the Nicaraguan National Guard, announced {last night that the recently launched | offensive agamst banditry had resulted | in three engagements in as many days. | with 12 bandits killed and t 9 wounded. The 4 1. McDougal said the Guardsmen officered by United States Marines, were scouring the hills and jungles of the northern sector, forcing the bandits to ight in their own haunts. The first fight occurred June 5. Capt Fagin, with a small detachment, en- gaged & group of 40 bandits at a point between ~Palacaguina and the Yali Range, in the Department of Jinotega. After ‘a 15-minute battle the bandits fled, leaving two wounded. Capt. Puller and Lieut. Lee, with 35 Guards, charged up a hill in a hot fight against another group the next day. Seven were killed, including the leader, Marcial Ri and the number of wounded was not determined. The fight was at Los Cedaros, west of Mount Guspinol Mountain, in the Department of Matagalpa. | The third battle occurred June 7 at Mancalian, just east of Ia Trinidad, in the Department of Estell. Lieut. Cobb, with & small Guard detachment, sur- | prised 59 bandits under the chieftain, Pedro Blandon, killing-five and wound- | ing seven. 4 HARRY BILLINGS KILLED Neck Is Broken Plunges Down News was received here foday of the death of Harry Billings, 67 years old, in an_automobile accident yesterday | near Gray, Ga. His car plunged over | a steep embankment, breaking his neck. | Billings had been & compositor and proofreader at the Government Print- | ing Office for more than 30 ye He | was retired March 7, 1925, | ‘When Auto Embankment. S S UDDEN 19 Nebraska Counties Lack Movie Shows, Omabha C. of C. Hears By the Associated Press. . OMAHA, Nebr., June 9.—There | | are 19 counties in Nebraska that never_have had a movie show, the ghamber of Commerce has learMd, R. J. | vertising man, told the chamber | | recently that a survey by mov- ‘ Miller, a theatrical ad- ing picture interests of the 93 Nebraska counties revealed ex- tensive territories within the State had no movie houses. The movieless counties, he explained, are in the sand hills and bad- land districts of Western Nebras- ka, where towns are few and ranches large. SO0S IS HEARD | Coast Guard Vessel Reports Appeal Cleared Up. NEW YORK, June 9 ()—The New | York station of the Mackay Radio & | Telegraph Co. last night reported receipt | of an S O § call from an undertermined source The radio station sald many ships were communicating by radio with the S Alleghany of the Merchants & s ship Co. of Baltimore, but that the messages did not indicate whether the Alleghany was in_distress, | her it was some other ship. ard vessel Diligent station that the leared up.” Radio operators said the trouble might have been of 8 minor nature that was Graduate McCormick Medien) Gilasses Fitted Colle €yes Examined DR. CLAUDE S. SEMONES Eyesight Specialist Phone National 0321 409-410 MeLachlen Bide. 10th _and G Kis. N.W. Rids The Home of O CRACK-sHOT 1o AL Shla Tt that Is guaranteed Binat 1s s fRemitlh CRACK-SHOT SERVICE o= ROACH DEATH | terday contemplate chains of such firsta ald stations at suitable points along aif | principal highways and at intersections |of ‘main arteries, based in waysid Each chain would be operated by t] chapter having jurisdiction.of the terria tory, under general supervision of H. Eniows, national director of first al | and life saving for the Red Cross. — # . Each station is to kug on hand § Service complete first-aid kit, with a telephons directory of physicians, hospitals an | ambulance services in the immediate vis New Emergency | cinity, with one trained Red Cross Aimed to Cut Road | worker always on hand. The Red Ci iti | pointed out there are more than 400,01 Fatalities. | Norkers trained for first aid all over thy | country. Volunteer automobile transs | portation for the injured would be re< By the Associated Press [ et hent neoaseay : The emergency first-aid highway| To assure required minimum stands service to be inctituted by the Ameri- | ards everywhere, the chapters will hav i b i |to obtain authority from the nation: can Red Cross in a campaign against | headquarters before opening any of the traffic fatalities is to be undertaken | first-aid posts. H through the local chapters in each iy s : community. | Japan has spent $400,000.000 in res Plans for the service announced yes- ' building since the earthquake in 19230 H H 1331 Fourteenth St. DEcatur 3410 CARRRIRERENE A Haw s AN | EISEMAN SUMMER SUIT Will Keep You Cool and Building Needs If planning the building of a house, garage, porch or any gen- eral repairs, take your list to J. Frank Kelly, Inc., and get an esti- mate on the materials needed . . . You can buy high-grade lumber for framing, flooring and trim; wallboard, Celotex, sand, gravel and cement, hardware and paints at prices that are right . . . Sud- den Service assures prompt de- livery . . . Drop in or call North Comfortable on the Hottest Days $|6.50 to‘ $30 Now — — Wear Now! in Convenient Weekly Buy Pay or J. FRANK * * HARDWARE - - COAL - - PAINTS BUILDING MATERIALS K gils 2101 GEORGIA AVE. LANSBURGH & BRO 1343, Delivery Service—AIl Orders Given Prompt Attention ELLY LUMBER & MILLWORK i Monthly Sums As You Get Paid No Interest or Extra Charges! EISEMAN’S Seventh and F Sts. 7th, 8th and E Sts.—FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—National 9800 BASEMENT S Here’s Downright Thrifty Economy—SHIRTS as GOOD as These Are Scarce at 88! TORE s » Whites—Colon Fancies 1,200 MEN’S NEW out purchase! White! Blue! Grey! Green! and Fancy Patterns! FAST COLOR Collar Attached SHIRTS 00° An extraordinary special, close Men who are ac- customed to wearing better shirts will not be disappointed in these! Fully cut, carefully tailored, and in every way high grade! This Label on Every Shirt Fast Color —Percales —Broadcloth —Rayon Madras —Woven Madras

Other pages from this issue: