Evening Star Newspaper, April 1, 1931, Page 12

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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1931. First Time on the Market OCEAN FRONT HOME at Ocean City, Md. N..t:l‘vlq-wdi-n-h.wh Coloniol Clap- Guest room and lavatory on first m and bath and chaufleur's ent. Covered porch th of kouse, playroom, ... Salisbury, Md. ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. and La. Ave. NW. 65th Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments ~ James E. Connelly James F. Shea sident Secretary nge to Nunn-Bush Ankle Fashioned/ 2y Most Styles $8.50, 810, $12.50 490K TO YOUR ANKLES FOR PRO No gapping, no slip- ping—no distortion of correct lines, even after months of wear. Try them on — see what a difference Ankle- Jashioning makes. Nunn-Bush Ankle-tashioned. OXFORDS Berberich';s F ST. ot TWELFTH RN T P A A 1932 BEAUTIFYING PROGRAM TAKEN UP | Reichelderfer, Havenner, De- [ lano, Gibbs Address C. of C. Meeting. ‘The forthcoming beautification pro- gram of the National Capital incident to the Clean-Up Campaign announced | by the District Commissioners and its | importance as a part of Washington's contribution $o the George Washington Bicentennial celebration next year was | the theme of discussion at a meeting | of the Washington Chamber of Com- merce at the Mayflower Hotel last night. Speakers at the meeting included Dr. Luthet H. Reichelderfer, chairman of the Board of Commissioners; Dr. George C. Havenner of the District Bi- centennial Commission; _Frederic A. Delano, chalrman of the District Clean- Up Campaign, and J. M. Gibbs, repre- senting the Federal Bicentennial Com- mission. Commissioner Reichelderfer openly pledged the aid of the city heads to the movement to clean up the National Capital this year, especially on account of the great 1932 event. Dr. Havenner announced the plans the District Bicentennial Commis- s Garden Committee to award a ies of prizes for lawn and garden beautification during the coming clean- up compaign, which begins the latter part of April. Awards will be made for individual gardens and for community effort, Dr. Havenner said. Campaign Work Outlined. The work of the Compalgn Committee was outlined to the chamber members by Mr. Delano. He expressed the grati- tude of the committee for the fine co- cperation being shown by the various civic and_trade organizations, and ex- pressed the belief that this co-opera- tion would mean the success of the campaign. He expressed particular ap- preciation of the offer of the Garden Club of America to co-operate with the Campaign Committee. Appearing in the absence of Repre- sentative Sol Bloom, associate director of the Federal Bicentennial group, who was ill, Mr. Gibbs briefly outlined the plans of the commission for the nation- wide celebration in 1932. The work of the chamber’s Bicenten- nial Committee in securing the acqui- escence of the Werner Bros.” motion pic- ture firm to produce a sound moving | picture with a Washington setting for 1932 was commended by Harry King, president of the chamber, and ap- plauded by the membership. Two members of this committee, A. Julian Brylawski, local official of War- ners Bros., and Sidney Lust, local thea- ter operator, conferred in’ Ncw York recently with executives of the Warner organization, who agreed to produce the picture. Thomas P. Littlepage, chair- man of the committee, announced that the film would cost approximately $60,- 000, and that a scenario contest is planned to secure a suitable story upon which to base the picture. Second-Year Preparations. Mr. Littlepage, general chairman of the five-year expansion program of the chamber, announced plans for the sec- ond year's stage of the program, which will commence with a membership drive in May. Announcement was made Ly Mr. King that thréugh the efforts of Dr. Frank W. Ballou the National Educa- tion Association, through its depart- ment of superintendence, had accepted an invitation to hold its 1932 conven- tion in Washington. 1t also was announced by the presi- dent that the chamber would partici- pate, through Col. William O. Tufts, Radios. at Bailey’s on Your Own Terms As Low as $1 .00 DOWN Pleasure w hile you PAY Here Are Wonderful Terms on a Big Shipment of Brand New Radios with super selectivity Here’s a fivetube, screen grid radio with dynamic speaker. With shiny American walnut finish. Come in and Hear Them Tomorrow At Any of Our Stores Radios at Bailgy’s And the Price Includes Tubes = The newest of the new! Full size console model with tone blender and electro- dynamic speaker. Seven tubes — screen grid. 1234 14th St. N. W. 2250 Sherman Ave. N.W. 624 Pa. Ave. S. E. 3228 Georgia Ave. N.W. on Your Own Terms in the sed ceremonies in honor of the late Charles F. Carusi. A report of the Committee on Police and Fire Protection, of which Charles W. Darr is chairman, setting forth the findings of a recent survey of police and fire housing conditions in the District, was adopted by the chamber. ‘The survey, exhaustive in its propor- tions, recommended a seties of improve- ments in several precinct and fire- houses, and the establishment of two additional fire brigade units. Plans for the forthcoming Festival of Nations were outlined by Isaac Gans, a | member of the committee arranging this event. NEW YORK-TO-FLORIDA | By the Associated Press. | JACKSONVILLE, Fla, April 1.— Direct air mail and passenger service between Jacksonville and New York was inaugurated today by the Eastern | Air Transport Co. | An 18-passenger cabin plane, accom- | panied by a smaller ship, took off from the municipal airport here at 8:40 a.m. | and was scheduled to reach New York | at 6:50 p.m. Stops were to be made at Savannah, Ga.: Charleston and Flor- ence, S. C.; Raleigh, N. C.; Richmond, Va.; Washington, Baltimore and Phila- delphia. W. Irving Gloves, Assistant Postmas- ter General, was among the passengers in_the big plane. Postmaster General Brown witnessed the take-off, Sweden is electrifying its main fed- eral railway line. Refrigeration Division 736 Thirteenth €. A. Muddiman Co, 9811 G St. NW. Miller-Lacey Co. 264 Carroll St. N.W. its underlying cause. a sign of Intestinal Fatigue! shows why this is so. For, parts of one continuous PLANE LINE IS OPENED o Trouble Here . + » _POISONS from clogged intestines DO you have to say “No,” too, whenever tempting refreshments are served? Does distress inevitably follow eating? Does indi- gestion spoil your enjoyment of every meal? Then listen to this . : : It's really very simple to correct your trouble— provided you attack Indigestion—“stomach trouble” —nearly al- ways results from a sluggish, unclean condi- tion of one vital part of your body. It is usually A glance at the picture above (at the left) see, your stomach and intestines are adjoining taminating food wastes accumulate in your intestinal tract, poisons generate and back right up iato your stomach. Fleischmanns Yeast U... CHAMBER UNIT T0STUDY JOBLESS Industrialists to See if Busi-| ness Can‘stabi!ize Work Without Federal Aid. By the Associated Press. ‘To see what business itself can do to stabilize employment without govern- mental assistance, the United States Chamber of Commerce today announced the appointment of prominent indus- trialists and financiers to a committee of inquiry. Its creation wa$ described at the chamber’s headquarters as evidence that business is concerned over proposals for State and Federal unemployment insur- ance. ¢ The aim is to ascertain how business men can best approach the unemploy- ment problem and what methods of control hold most promise of averting or minimizing such fluctuations as brought about present conditicns. Members of Committee. Henry 1. Harriman, chairman of the board of the New England Power Asso- ciation, was named chairman. Other members are George J, Anderson, president of the Consolidation Coal Co., New York City; Willis H. Booth, vice president of the Guaranty Trust Co., New York; Stuart W. Cramer, president, Cramerton Mills, Inc, Cramerton, N. C.; Henry S. Den- ison, president, Denison Manufacturing Co, Framingham, Mass.; John H. Fahey, Boston; W. PF. Gephart, vice president, First National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Walter J. Kohler, presi- dent, Kohler Co., Kohler, Wis.; Leroy A. Lincoln, vice president, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York; P. W. Litchfleld, president, Gopdyear Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, Ohio. Paul Shoup, president, Southern Pa- cific Co., San Francisco; Robert E. Tally, president, United Verde Copper Co.; L. D. H. Weld, director of research, McCann Erickson Co., New York, and Arthur H. Young, secretary, Industrial Relations Counselors, Inc., New York. Several additional members will be named shortly. Need Spreading of Wages. Julius Barnes, chairman of the board of the chamber, said the immediate | problem was to devise means of spread- ing wages over the entire mass of Amer- | ican workers, so all will be earning. In_this way, he explained, the total 'Don’t Be Fooled @ B oo - | calt the Original |KRIEG’S EXPRESS & STORAGE CO. 616 Eye St. Dist. 2010 Nearly 5 rs of Experience g The ‘completely balanced” Electric Refrigerator Hermetiecally Sealed | Quiet Mechanism The new-type WESTINGHOUSE Quiet Mechanism is hermetically sealed in a dust-proof, moisture-proof, air-tight and oil-tight Vault of Steel. Designed to give . years and years of unfailing, care-free per- formance, withoutneed of service. See this | and other advanced scientific features be- fore you buy any mechanical refrigerator. Westinghouse REFRIGERATOR Epcar Morris SaLes Co. Metropolitan Distributors St. N.W. DEALERS J. C. Harding & Co., Inc. . 1336 Connecticut Ave. N.W. + Hyattsville Hardware Co. Hyattsville, Md. o as you can readily tube. When con- NAtional 1031 Rudolph & West Co. 1332 New York Ave. N.W. Freddy’s Hardware Co. Silver Spring, Md. causes Indigestion . « « Distress after Eating. INDIGESTION! When discomfort always follows eating you can’t enjoy even the most back upinto the stomachand cause ¥ tempting refreshments; You can keep your digestive system trouble-free by eating : : s ¥ away accumulated body wastes: V¥ more need to deny yoursclf food you likel She Always had to say"NO ... Tempting food she actually hungered for— . denied to her because of INDIGESTION. Read how to correct the cause of most stomach .trouble Naturally these poisons upset digestion, cut off your appetite. In addition, they seep into your blood and circulate all through your body ...making you nervous and out of sorts, causing pimples and sallow skin, headaches, coated tongue, bad breath, etc. Now for 75 years doctors have known that Intestinal Fatigue yields to the action of a ' remarkable food : . . fresh yeast! Today, all over the world, famous physicians are advis- ing this simple, sensible method of dealing 7 B : N is fresh yeast... the only hind that benefils you_fully. s in earnings would represent sums otherwise applied to savings and a greater proportion of the total earnings would be kept in circulation, bolstering demand and consequently general bus- iness conditions. Some units of industry have made progress in this direction, he continued, and the committee will study their methods. 1f employes of the key industries had HERALD TRIBUNE WINS ‘ Typographical Awarfs Given to| Five Other Newspapers. PHILADELPHIA, April 1 (#)—The New York Herald Tribune yesterday | won the Francis Wayland Ayer cup at | the first exhibition of newspaper typog- raphy held in the Ayer Galleries here. | ‘The awards were made on the basis of three points, typography, presswork and make-up. * . { Winners of the five certificates of ex- cellence were the Long Beach Sun, Long Beach, Calif.: Portland Evening Ex- press, Portland, Me.: Philadelphia Pub- lic Ledger, Morning Oregonian, Port- land, Oreg., and Charleston Gazette Charleston, W. Va. They were not graded in order of excellence. | assurance against sudden periods of | non-employment, Mr. Barnes said, the confidence of all workers would be bol- stered. Village Has Radio Clock. | Hythe, a little seaside village, clllms‘ ndcosfs only about 1% cents | per day and 5 cents Sundays %o have Washington's best newsps- per delivered to you frery evening and Sundsy mofm= ng. Telephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- atel*. The Route Agent will col- lect at the end of each month. | to have the first radio clock in England. | The instrument has been placed in the village square by its inventor, Wallace | Maton. Not only can its faee be seen | | from nearly every part of the village, | but the chimes of Big Ben and the| While in a hospital in Chelmsford, Greenwich time signal of six dots am- | England, as the result of an automobile plified by a loudspeaker, keep even |accident. recently, Rev. J. H. Morgan | more distant cottagers informed of the | was instituted as a vicar of the new | correcttime. | parish of Ascension. DON‘T let your wife see this or you'll spoil a wonderful chance to surprise and please her. And to save yourself some money at the same time! It’s about her charm ... her health and et attractiveness . .. and her comradeship with you. These things are vital to both of you.:: and to your permanent happiness. Yet how often, when you get home, things seem out of sorts. She's tired A Word and Jooks it. Or maybe you were going out together Husbands Break it! Tell her tonight to give Man- hattan a two week’s trial. Think how pleased she’ll be. No more “washday hang- over” for her. No more wasted beauty care .« . undone by work and worry. And no more of that embarrassing “married to the washwoman” feeling for you. Take our word for it that you'll save money. The reason is easy to see. Here at Manhattan we launder everything in soft net bags—which keep ow the wear that wears out clothes. We can’t prove that the first week : . : un- less you visit us and see. But these net bags actually save you money by saving your clothes. Pure Palm il Soap plays its part too g and floods of soft, fil- tered water. Every Manhattan Service gets this same thorough care ; ; ;: even rough dry. And every bundle comes back to you in 3 short days, instead of 4 or more. If you believe in good investments let your wife phone Manhattan. We'll explain the service that best fits your home : : : and your budget. But ;show your sound judgment to- night and end her washday worries forever! You'll never regret it. Our number is Deca- tur 1120—and we'll be waiting for that call. | | | and she’s*in no mood for it. And to make matters worse supper is late again. Washday is one of the chief causes of all this. Rough, red hands, tired back and aching muscles ruin any woman’s charm. Even if she doesn’t wash the clothes herself she has to worry with a washwom- an—an upset household— embarrassing clotheslines. No wonder so many wives begin to age before their husbands!No wonder their healthy vitality slips away so soon. How can anywom- an be bright and attract- ive ... and thoughtful ... after months of such weary work. She can’t...and you both pay the price! But you think you're saving money. So your false economy becomes a habit. CALL DECATUR 1120 MANHATTAN Lauml;y Net Bags Save You Money By Saving Your Clothes VIRGINIA OFFICE: WILSON BOULEVARD AND MILITARY ROAD, ROSSLYN, VIRGINIA . Eotire Advertisement Copyrighted 1931 *+ Eating Yeast + Brings Health! © i L R v YEAST. Threecakesadayclear ‘9 BETTER DIGESTION is the result! No Your skin clears up: You are less susceptible to sore throats and colds. And .all this, remember, without a single violent expedient—a single cathartic or habit- forming pill! For fresh yeast is a food. It is richer than any other substance in elements ordinary food all too often lacks—vitamins B and G and the “sunshine” vitamin D. Every cake of Fleischmann’s Yeast abounds in these three indispensable vitamins. So don’t put it off! Strike at indigestion by adding Fleischmann’s Yeast to your diet, today: You can get it at grocers’, restaurants and soda fountains. Eat it just plain, or with a sprinkle of salt, or dissolved in a third of a glass of water (hot or cold), or in milk or fruit juices: Eat it any way you like. And—most impor- pt of all—keep it up! with internal sluggishness and kindred ills. Eaten regularly, three cakes a day— before meals, or between meals and at bedtime— fresh yeast softens and looséns the food particles that have been clogging the intestinal tract. At the same time it stimulates and strengthens tive sluggish intestinal muscles. Soon your body begins to throw off its daily accumulation of wastes in a natural, regular way. Your indigestion disappears. Head- aches stop. Normal appetite returns: £

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