Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1930, Page 3

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Your refrigerator is 100% efficient when 6625% full of American Ice. American ICE Company American Drivers will take your order _for American_Quality Coal _ , Thanksgiving Day Dine at 72n0 YeAR While Y. 95c it | i .$6.00 to $8.00 No. 7 Duco Polishing. . .$2.00 0Oil Polishing .81 Vacuum Clea F. P. SHEEHY NU-WAY AUTO LAUNDRY 24-26 H St. N.E. Regular Delivery Over 100,000 families read The Star every day. The great ma- have the paper delivered ly every even! day morning at s cost of 1% cents daily and 5 cents Sunday. If you are not taking advan- tage of this regular service at this low cost, telephone National 5000 now and service will CYCLES SANTACLAUS end His Gnomies | 18 G T_THE th Yhojaets of Wosd: M O et Smss ton, District of Co: bis, on Tuesday, dhlmny 6 1631, at 13 m O'clock, for the of 'trustees for ear and such other Bt e, betore It ._EVERETT. WILL IOHN B. MP, Brandywl z WISH TO ANNOUNCE THAT I WILL responsible for any debt contracted 307 one than mysell. WILBUR Avxl ug mmau m-n v, né 27 ebts contiac uuu YA .INC 'HE APPEA] cnslono—'nn |nvenloro fiirnsce and roof r Zimme; nter. lood roof ; jood ow fore Ill|~ll tomu let lhll rtlllhl! firm pro- teet your roof from dec: ‘Roofing ' 3rd St. 8.W. ) _Company __District 0933. T Window Shades 95¢ Genuine $1.50 Quality Hartshor proof. Cleanable Curtains on your eur factory: any sl 36 e Shade Factory 30T Conn. Ave. Printing Craftsmen... are at your service for result-getting publicity The Naticmaf 12j0:1212 D St N.W. % mv*c).,..j;,.. B il i South. " Lons-distance mo Phone Ni s Transfer & Storage | Company. e Ahll! Van Line &IVT:! Overstuffed Furniture Cleaned. | Let us give you an estimate A. C. Thour Cleanin, m-” 11th Il H! Lm(on 1265-1366. Pumpernickel. Live l'rn ‘Herring Candias. Capital Press Co., lnc., | _....| MIDDLE WEST COLD TAKES SIX LIVES Police Stations Shelter 2,500—Suffering in Many Cities. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 26.—A cold wave sweeping down from the North- west brought death and suffering today to the Middle West, many sections of which were blanketed with snow. At least six deaths were attributed, dhectly or indirectly, to the storm. Two were in ‘Chicago, where a railroad switchman slipped from the ey top of a car in a fatal fall, and exposure ac- counted for another victim. At West Bend, Iowa, a woman was killed wher. her automobile skidded on an icy road and turned over, and another met death at Lebanon, Ind., where a blinding snow prevented her from seeing an approach- ing train. Milwaukee reported one death from txposure as temperatures throughout Wisconsin ranged from 20 above to near zero. Peoria, Ill, also one death from the same cause. 2,500 Seek Shelter. In Chicago, more than 2,500 men sought protection during a night of biting cold in police stations and shel- ters for the unemployed as plans went forward to make further provision for their conefort. By nightfall another shelter, the largest in the city, was to be put in service by the Salvation Army, acting for the State Ccmmission on Unemployment Relief, with a ca- pacity for 1,000 men. The temperature sank as low as 16 above yesterday. At Cleveland, police and charitable organizations were host to hundreds of jobless, driven to shelter by tempera- tures around 20 above. Ohio was cov- ered by a thin blanket of snow. A tale of loyalty and courage during Tuesday’s storm was related in Lincoln, Il | Nebr., today by Warden Fenton of the Nebraska Penitentiary. During the gale which whipped a large section from the prison shirt factory roof, the prison authorities called for volunteers to make repairs to the supporting beams. In- mates and guards responded. Some Schools Closed. ‘The snow was general in Minnesota and Eastern North Dakota, reaching blizzard proportions at Grand Forks and Fargo. Some schools were forced to abandon classes in Fargo. Other sections of the “Middle West experienced high winds, which caused some property damage at Lincoln, Nebr., and at Creston, Iowa. At Creston the speed of the wind reached that of & tornado, and destroyed a garage. Sioux City, Iowa, reported a 50-mile gale. A warning against high northwest winds was sounded by the Weather Bureau for the Great Lakes region. COLDER IN VIRGINIA. Carolinas Have Near Freezing Tempera- ture—Death in Kentucky. ATLANTA, November 26 (7).—_Winter in the South today. Virginia experienced sflfl breezes on t.he coast, & scattering of snow and a kmpemm in the Southwest to 21, the sea- | son’s low. Near-freezing readings ruled i.n the Carolinas and the mercury was m t.hrofl%xeh the low thirties in sl ermamses. After a night in predicted for the extreme northern sec- tor of the State, Florida anticipated a return to normal temperatures today. Police at Ludlow, Ky., entered the name of & man known only as “Riley” on their records as the first victim of the ‘Winter in Northern Kentucky. He was I% Ol' SALE TO HELP UNEMPLOYED A. Wilner Co., custom tailors, at mhth and G sts. n.w., announced yes- terday that 5% of their annual 4-hour Thanksgiving day sale of -to- order Suits or Overcoats at $29.00 would be turned over to the Chamber of Com- merce Pund for the benefit of the un- employed. ‘This sale has become quite popular in pest years, and with the additional 5% for the unemployed, it should at- tract record crowds.—Advertisement. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1930. fo\mddud'nfm‘ in & shack along the Ohio River. Foot ball fans said the cold snap meant firm flelds and crisp weather for Thanksgiving day games. EASTERN STATES SHIVER. Drop From 50 to 34 Degrees New York's Coldest of Season. NEW YORK, November 26 (#).—The first real cold snap of the season, ac- companied in many places by snow, grmfled today throughout the Eastern ‘Temperatures began to yester- day when a bitter west w\nd. ‘which at times reached a velocity of 45 miles an hour, swept the seal drop of 16 delreen from a eommruble 50 to 34 brought the mercury in York City to the lowest point for the season. Brief snow flurries occurred in some parts of the metropolitan area. Many sections of up-State New York experienced snow or cold rains with temperatures at or near freezing. At Jamestown snow filled the air for 14 hours, but melted as it fell. Buffalo had a minimum temperature of 33 de- grees and the mercury reached 32 at Rochester and Syracuse. It was near freezing at Binghamton and Lockport. Will Rogers BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. —Every government in the world today has more di.;’cflnlenhld people than usual, but I think there is less ccmplaint by the subjects in Russia than any- where else. That is, they don’t com- plain as long. Russia hasn't to- day in her borders ‘what you would call a constant critic. You simply say your say and then you are through. Russia is a country that is burying their Q.roublee ‘Your criticism is your epitaph. “Here lies the body of Boris Ogimsky. He said Stalin the dicta- tor, wouldn’t last, but he outlived himsky.” 006000000000 15 a Day” YOU “15 a Day’ NEED MORE EXERCISE GYM_EQUIPMENT Heallh Equipment Co. UNITED* STATES TORAG OMPANY thel' e’S no after attempt to “sell” you when we give an esti- mate on storage or mov- ing. Better service at a lower figure can’t be had, so we let the mat- ter rest entirely with your judgment. ¥ Call Metropolitan 1843 when we can help you. % 418 10th Street % 8,950 = Exhibit Home 5601 4th St. Park) ear line to Longfellow st. 1418 Eye St. Inspect Tonight or Tomorrow NEW. ALL-BRICK HOMES Facing 120-Ft. Boulevard—Near Govt. Park and 14th St. Car Line 4th & Longfellow Sts. N.W. W New community group just completed. Brick, fully screened, handsomely de- signed, 6 and 7 rooms, 2 and 3 porches, tile baths, cedar closets, oak floors (some have fireplaces) ; built-in garages, electric refrigeration, inlaid linoleum on kitchen floor, large landscaped lawns. Homes face 120-it. boulevard, near Govt. park and 14th St. car line. Nat’l 5904 | i | I to the left. Grda Your Thanksgivinz Cider Today—No Deliveries Made on Thursda; Samuel C. Palmer, Inc. .+ Telephone West 0190 2400 Sixteenth Street SPecial Claims to Preferment. No. 11.—Assured Future. Kenwood has been planned with very definite consideration for its future—with the elimination of those loopholea for deteriora- tion which are common experiences—insur- lng to your investment here a oontmuous divi- dend in realty value and contented residence. The Exhibit House, 301 Brookside Drive, furnished by W. B, Moses & Sons, is open for inspection from 10 to 6 every day. Go west of Wisconsin Avenue on Bradley Lane, continuing under the viaduct to the entrance to Kenwood, three short squares Kennedy-Chamberlin Devclopment Co. . Columbia 7280 FAVORS SATURDAY AS HALF HOLIDAY : Civil Service League Head Says Work Done Would Not Be Reduced. Legislation providing a half-holiday Saturday sfternoon for Government workers the year through .would not “materially reduce the quantity of work Eflomed," according to Mrs. Margaret lopkins Worrell, president of the League of the American Civil Service. In a statement issued yesterday on the matter Mrs. Worrell reviewed the movement to provide a half holiday for | Government workers, and declared that by enacting the pending !emauélnn which her organization sponsors, “Con- gress would not be establishing a new practice, but will merely be keeping | pace with developments that have heerfl oln' on in private industry for some | T 1a hoped,” said Mrs. Worrell, “that | this bill will pass early in the coming| session of Congress. “The language of the bill follows in a general way the executive order of the President’ granting a three-and-a- xceptional cases of employes cannot be spared on Satur- day. “Under the terms of the bill spon- sored by the League of the American Civil Service these employes would be entitled to a half holiday on some other day of the week, which, of course, would be determined by the head of the de- partment or bureau in which they work. “Attention is called to the fact that there is no evidence that the gnn of Saturday half holidays to the Gov- ernment ' employes of the District of Columbia four months of the mr has resulted in any increased cost to the Government.” MISSING TEACHER & Trio Taken Into Custody Tell Conflicting Stories Con- cerning Movements. By the Associated Press. FORT MORGAN, Colo., November TWO CONVICTED IN DEATH Dressmaker Lured Manufacturer Into Trap for Man in Strike. NEW YORK, November 26 X Irving Ashkenas, 28, alleged Iubor racketeer, and Mrs. Rose Rosenberg, 30, & dressmaker, were convicted of second- degree manslaughter last night in the death last February of Jacob Rotenberg, a dress manufacturer, during a garment strike. Mrs. Rosenberg was charged with having lured Rotenberg to Broadway and Thirty-ninth street, where thr- nas fractured his skull with a manhole cover. Both are liable to sentences of from 1 to 15 years. GIFT HINTS Other Gifts 75 to Several Thousand To inspeet: left two squares to Maple avenue, One of the new homes on Maple Avenue, in the Shannon & Luchs development of the Forest Section of Chevy Chase. the spirit of Thanksgiving is centered in the home, we have made gements for a finished house to be open, heated and lighted this evening and Thanksgiving day until 9 p.m. for your inspection. Drive out Connecticut avenue to Bradley Lane, furn Because then follow our signs. Best for Growing Children fat and carbohydrates rich flavor. cover the entire bottle Wi Brothers “GRADE GUERNSEY” A special milk for growing children and convalescents, particularly rich in the digestible that supply heat and energy. Of a deep golden color and delicious, Capped with “Hood Seals,” which top. Preferable for adults, too—Simply phone: Wise Brothers CHevy CHASE DAIRY Yhone WEST OI183 Main Office and Dairy Plant, 3204-08 N Street N.W. 26.—Three men were held today for Questioning about the mysterious dis- Appearance more than a week ago of Miss Enid Marriott, 28-year-old Wig- gins, Colo,, school teacher. The trio were taken into custody yes- terday at Wiggins, where Miss Marriott dropped from sight a few moments after alighting from a train the night |* of November 16, sner a week end in Denver, The three men—Tom Schopflin, 18; Willlam Heebe, 18, and Arthur Gray, 22—are farm laborers. Sheriff R. Johnson sald two of them when ques- tioned yesterday told conflicting stories “MESSIAH” EXCITES CHILE Character in Biblical Dress Jailed. Has 12 Diciples. VICUNA, Chile, November 26 (#).— AuNormChlhhudmmthew -mlm":no‘fv w0 "'&‘3 mmtm term o e m Dm'm Zarate, with 13 disch and othu Inlln':rl bearing Bib} nunu. is in jail here. He wears in garments of flowing beard, dresses A. Blhllul style, and says that he spent six months of penitence in a cave, liv- ing on only bread and water. MILK FROM THE WORLD STORE FOR RENT ~—downtown, 114 blocks from F St, close to new building of Electric Co., Gas Light Co., and Government Office l-lldh.u 4,000 oq. ft., with mezzanine, fireproo! s $300 me. MEtro. 1844 office Pnu $15,950 6505 Conn. Avenue Chevy Chase New Stone, lrlck and Stucco Home. BED- ROOMS, 2 BATHS 2- CAR BUILT-IN GARAGE. D”ge lot, trees. 3 lighted till 9 pm. Edw. H. Jones & Co., Inc. 5520 Conn. Ave. Cleve. 2300 MODEL DAI REGULARLY important at 30 as at 3 years! For plenty of good, rich milk every day means sound health . . . and health surely is life’s most precious possession...no matter at what asel Milk is Nature’s perfect health food. It provides important vitamins, calcium and other chemicals 5o necessary to your well-being. Drink a quart aday...every day. Don’t delay starting...Phone us ‘oday and your supply of EXTRA rich, EXTRA safe milk will begin tomorrow morning. Selected os the World's Mode Dairy Plant end rated 100% by the District of Columbia Health Department. PHONE POTOMA 4000 FOR SERVICE Don’t Be Taken for a Financial -Ride By the Wall Street Elevator Because lts Safety Out of Order. Control Seems ¢o Be . ‘When You Ride on it Expechng to Go to the Top You So Ofl'en Land in the Basement. Why Throw or Gamble Your Money Away On Doubtful Securities? Or even speculate in the so-called good ones, where you have no decisive voice in their management. Think of the le whose margins have vanished into thin air, Think fi:if much more satisfactory it would have been for them to have invested their life savings in Washington, D, C., real estate, which after all is secured by the future of our ous country. Instead of Having This Happen to You Why Not Be a Partner of Uncle Sam? Own a Part of the Nation’s Capital\ The safest and most stable investment in the United States, because as a Nation grows, so grows its Capital City. The most pessimistic can hardly doubt the great future this wonderful country of ours is destined to have. The two-hundred-million-dollar or more building program of the Federal Government would of itself be thc occasion of a Boom in many other more progressive cities, but we Washingtonians hardly pay any attention to it. Here fa- miliarity seems to have bred contempt for the many splen- did things Uncle Sam is doing for us. We have allowed many out-of-town capitalists to come here and snap up at amazingly low prices some of the finest properties we have. Get Wise to Yourself Own Your Share of W ashington While Prices Are at the Present Low Level You Will Never Regret It Of course, select wisely in the right section and employ a responsible realtor to represent you. JOHN F. MAURY REALTOR ., 1705 Kay St. N.W. . Phone Nat. 4080 AevPil. e B EETn

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