Evening Star Newspaper, May 20, 1931, Page 6

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Went to Aima Mater to Ar- range Gift, but Found No Place for It, He Says. Officers Maintain He Made Associated Press. EW YORK, May 20.—The Ameri- ‘boy is more of a reader than ever. | 'still trave's tae road from poverty | #iches with Horatio Alger, jr. and Ofjver Optic, sti'] thrills to G. A. Henty | 1 sits with bated breath as Nick | corners bloody criminals. | ublishers, librarians and | ys' _publications y, however, that stories of r=al life, | ture, science, history, nature and | ppits have come more and more into | defiand for young America's bookshelf. | hile Robert Louis Stevenson. .nmh‘ more Cooper and Rudyard Kipling | (as popular as ever, modern youth efids with equal avidity the adventures | offkindbergh, Admiral Byrd and other nal heroes. | ks on aviation lead in favor. A on the American Indian. written | lph Hubbard, the sea stories of | Hgward Peasc, and the nature stories oft Wilfred Bronson and Edgar Rice Birroughs, are equally popular. | 2,891 repiies to a recent ques- | e 'sent out by the Boy Scout | e to its youthful subseribers, it | irevealed the following are favorites: | Grey, P. K. Fitzhugh. Mark n, undber'h Edgar Rice Bur- Alt Shaler, Ralph Heary Bar- bor, Victor Appleton, Jamss Fenimore qoper, Booth Tarkingien and Robert is Stevenson nother questicnnaire gent out in !9 0 received 4,247 replies. It revealed | popular subjects were adventure, pbies and handieraft, scouts, nature le girls still read the romantic | off boarding school iffe, it was found y are becoming more interested in | tery stories, ml:lo a5 a rule read | BOT T0 DISCUSS | WEATHER STUDIES | Smithsonian Secretary to Show‘ Long-Range Prediction Possibilities. ‘The volllbfl.tia offered in " wea forecasting _throi and ding of nohr TAl IM are to be discussed by Dr. Clurlu t. lecnwry of the Smithsonian m G. Abbot! In.!tlhmm'l auspices of Ju.nment ter in Mount Pleasant Congr al Church Monday night at .15 o'clock, The title of his address is to be “The Bun, Weather and Stars,” and in it Dr. Abbot. is to discuss the effect of solar radiation on temperature and other S g i st 5 an of Hnnzwém Comw m;tlt‘:e of m{e Adjust- ment ms.uondn will |- be illustrated. 4 Representatives nt the Bmlmhn Institution have been IU# tions of selar radiation in since 1903 and in an' ol . Chile since 1918 and in Africa, with the assis e expect o be S ah oot 2 m. lgaawm ‘we can pres e C the ufl- ,Lfrz :f':‘he sun we fl”% lict e low upon the weather. ‘guoby'm mey hcpe that in lflb&:finly short, tlme we shall bedn & position to fore- cast weaths for a.long time in advance.” FIFTY nsnwmms ARRIVE e 2, Ontocsay, e et | from the v:%e-we -Redwoods League California, 0f which Dr. John O, Mer- riam, president of the Carnegie Insti- tution of is the head, will | not, be set. out this was made hdl nnpuncement by nm Lieut. F. B. Butler, assistan director of * Bulldings and Pnn.. himself a nal of California, who ex- | plained that the redwoods will be kept | in the nursery so that they may become | better acclimated to this region. ‘The trees, which arrived recenfly from | | California, are doing “real well” Lieut. Butler sajd. They will be planted in | various places in the natural parks of the city next i + Trouble Here L] POISONS FROM clo; .ed I intestines may cause HEADACHE ? Watch out/ It’s Nature’s way of warning you of a serious "health trouble —INTESTINAL FATIGUE 'OU know it well enough . . . that hot, splitting head means ly deranged condition some- where within your system. It de mands serious attention! Generally, doctors tell us, the trouble is that all-too-common one +. . Intestinal Fatigue! In Intestinal Fatigue, waste ma- terial stagnates in your intestincs, breeding poisons that circulete roughout ;our body. Headackes No Mention of Intention. Present Acceptable. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, May 20.—There seemed to be a wide divergence today between Sinclair Lewis and officials of Sterling | Memorial Library, at Yale University, over whether the author had offered his Nob:l Prize medal to the library. Lewis said he offered the mml which he was awarded with the $46,350 prue to the library. Charles E. Rush, ciated librarian, said no offer was mm Says Ne Place for Gift. “1 thought the Yale Library was the natural phce for the medal, and so while motoring from Westport, Conn., to Bethel, Vt. last Saturday. I swpped off at New Haven,” Lewis learned better, however, than to (ry lu make any presents to the Yale Library. 'rney yun didn’'t seem interested and said there wasn't any place in their col- lecmm for such an item. in his version of Lewis' visit to the m:r-rv said: “He asked if we had any exhibit of | coins or medals—a perma exhibit. T told him that we had qui matic collection and would be show it to him then if he would care | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, LEWIS DECLARES NOBEL MEDAL OFFERED YALE—STAFF SAYS NOI SINCLAIR LEWIS. know what he meant by a permanent loan and asked him to explain. Then he said, ‘No, I won't do it and turned his heel and walked out of the bufldml He hadn't made the slightest mention of any mt, to the library or of the Nobel medal Prof. Andrew KooghA chief librarian, said that the Yale Library had not re- fused the offer of the Nobel medal, be- cause it had never been made. Medal Acceptable. “We would take the gift cheerfully,” he said. “All he has to do is to put it in a box and mail it to us and we will put it on exhibit for a period of | time, then place it with our other coins And medals. “As for putiing it on permanent ex- Over the Week-end | 3820 New York =Tl Il I i PLAINFIELD, ELIZABETH, NEWARK On Sale for Use Every Saturday to and Including August 29th Tickets valld (n Coaches or Pullman cars ¢ ing on trom charges) . aad inclading ¢ raine S " ta"and includios 7 m parment of Fallmen 5 midnight. Friday. to Columbian. ~Good for from New York (Jersey Sunday. This low fare affords aa epportanity fe vislt New York Saturday and Sunday at very reason: Baltimore & Ohio Drive Away With New Tires ‘Lowest Prices in 10 Years CASH ORCREDIT U. S. Peerless 4.50-20 (29x4.50) 4.50-21 (30x4.50). 4.75-19 (28x4.75)... Olhu Sizes Pw- portionately as Low Liberal Allowance on Your OM Tires No Waiting Immediate Installation 5 1234 14th St NW. 2250 Sherman Ave. NW. 624 Pa. Ave. S.E. 3228 Ga. Ave. N.W. BATTERIES Causes Headaches HEADACHES . . . Strike out at them by correcting Intestinal Fatigue., are one of the commonest results. But don’t think you can cure your trouble with violent purgatives and pills. Permanent relief from internal sluggishness demands a gentler, more sensible method. For 75 years medical science has known such a method. Today it is available to you! Eaten regularly, like any other food, Fleischmann's Yeast softens | the clogging waste matter in vour | Eat Yeast Y JUST EAT three calles Fleischmann’s Yeast daily, intestinal tract and stimulates the normal action that helps remove it. Thus yeast corrects the chief underlying cause of headaches. Your appetite picksup. Youtireiess quicke ly—feel more energetic and alert! But_you must act! All grocers have Fleischmann's Yeast—also res- taurants and soda fountains. Just eat 3 cakes a day—before meals, or GALLINGER HOSPITAL NURSES GRADUATED pOr. luehelderler Presides g . Diploma Presentation to k') Twenty-five. lt4 | Gramsates of the Capital City School | of Nursing at Gallinger Hospital re. ceived diplomas 'l’::: night upon com e-: .0, Luther Reichelderfer, president of the‘ | District Commissioners, presided at the exmuu and Dr. Edgar A. Bocock,| WEDNESDAY, superintendent of the hospital, present- | \argaret Laurs ed the diplomas. Dr. P. C. Smith, assistant surgeon general of the Public Health Service, made the principal address and mvoumm and bpe.nefllcuon were rfi: red by Rev. John Cartwright of 8t. | nu—u:h Catholic Church. Katherine MAY .20, 1931. E. Moran, sented the, Ries, sal Rath, valedictorian; Margaret Ahlstrom, Leona Marle Ardine, Victoria Marie Bonville, Glena Carolyn Brnyn. Mlmret C. Buhot, Geraldine Beatrice Coombs, Margaret !u-b«.h Daley. Gladys Murtel Davis, unm dine h-lrwu Lucile Jackson, Mil 'A d lizabeth xlm ng:nundnt of nurses, pre. | The mau-uu class consisted ah of Duo-Duck is the newest Dletion of their tion before it When Process™ dunnx the Estimates V& ATiantic 0023 3 between meals and at bedtime. Di- rections are on the label. Eat FLEISCHMANN'S YEAST for Health—3 Cakes a Day | he would have to make formal appli Lewis was graduated from Yale' | IFREE Sromcls you have your Rugs, Draperies, Blankets or Winter Appare] cleaned by our we store them eaners = Columbia Building Association 716 11th St. N.W. Under Government Supervision and smartest would even be consid- Compounded Semi-Annually ‘The above model in white and black or white and brown duo-duck—the new cloth fabric that is so soft and comfortable yet so sturdy that it makesan o o o $8.50 ideal Summer shoe. WolféM: Over Shop 929 F Street Let Us Refinarice Your Maturing Real Estate Loan +‘Special ’ Pays 5% | eaamer Ionthe Cheerfully Givem o OCGUE No Commissions Charged 22 Years’ Successful Business Without the Loss of a Dime 3rd & Eye Sts. N.E. | COMMANDER EIGHT More power per cubic inch than in any $1585 DICTATOR EIGHT %1130 other car under $2400! 124" Wheel- 81 horsepower, eight-cylinder perform- base—101 horsepower . . . ance, safe, distinctive steel body, double- drop frame, comfort, stamina PRESIDENT EIGHT The wnchallenged Champion—holds $ 1 8 5 O STUDEBAKER Most powerful car at its price — Stude- baker Champion quality throughout. 70 horsepower—114" Wheelbase . . . All prices at the factory. Bumpers and spare tires extra, more official records than any other stock car. 122 horsepower—130"Wheelbase 895 All Free Wheeling, with positive gear control and one shift lever, instead of two HESE four cars are the turning point of an industry that once again is turning to Studebaker for leadership. Four cars that represent the limit of this era’s engineering advancement . . . Studebaker’s latest contribution to a motoring America that is eager for new methods that make for reduced costs. With Free Wheeling, Studebaker is in- augurating new principles of propul- stock car records . .. and their thrift with Free Wheeling is certified by Studebaker’s recent capture of the national economy championship from 39 cars of 19 makes. sion without which any modern car is already old! . .. principles that put momentum on a leash and upkeep on a diet! . . . saving 15% to 20% in gaso- line and oil . . . reducing clutch-pushing and easing gear-shifting . . . providing new measures of safety that command the approbation of traffic officials from coast to coast, ’ These four Free Wheeling Stude- bakers are years ahead of their time! ‘Whoever buys a car with the imprint of the Studebaker name and the im- press of Studebaker workmanship is protected by the 79-year policy of advanced achievement that gives inherent 'permanence to everything Studebaker does. Ten months ago Studebaker pioneered Free Wheeling . . . and today it seems the world of motor cars is planning to vindicate the pioneer...proposing to make Free Wheeling as universal as the electric starter. But deeds speak louder than details! ...the speed and stamina of Stude- * paker cars are established by official LEE D. BUTLER INCORPORATED 1132-34 Connecticut Avenue—Columbia 5050 (Opposite the Mayflower Hotel) Traded Car Department and Service Station, 2155 Champlain St. (Above V near Eighteenth) ASSOCIATE DEALERS TOM'S AUTO SERVICE, INC. & 637 N St. NW. KENDRICK & SHREVE, nnecticut Ave. N.W. COLLEGE PARK AUTO PLACE, College Park, Md. BOYD-CARLIN MOTOR CO., Alexandra, Va. EROSIUS BROS. & GORMLEY, INC., Rockville, Md. WOODSON MOTOR CO., Sitver Srrlnl, Md. PARIs AUT RVICE, INC., Quantice, Va. JOHN T. PARRAN, Indian Head, Md. BLUE RIDGE MO PR SALES, Turcellville, Va. -

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