Evening Star Newspaper, May 25, 1931, Page 6

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7 VEq N " PERRINS SAUCE With drawn butter makes the best dressing for g ‘NIW POTATO!S, Low-Fare Outings Fares shouwn ore Rourd Ti:p EASTERN STANDARD TIME $1.25 BALTIMORE Lvery Saturday and Sunday Tickets good only in coaches on all regular trains and sold Saturday #90d _to return Sunday night. WEEK-END _EXCURSION $8.50 NEW YORK Good roing every Saturday, all day, returning Sunday wntil 6:40 P.M. 0Q BOSTON. Mass. $11. PROVIDENCE, FRIDAY Returning SU Ly. Washington $5.50 ATLANTIC CITY FRIDA May 2! MWasimacton " ONE DAY or ND in HICAGO, ILL. Lyv. FRIDAY, May 28 Retur May 30 520, Returning May 31 Ly, Washington, .......... 4:05 P.M. NIAGARA FALLS MEMORIAL DAY, Lv. Fri.. May 20 $8.50, Returning May 30 10.50. Returning May 3 above fares. special reduced trip fares. Lv. Wasbington . 6:55 P.M. $4.00 ATLANTIC CITY MEMORIAL DAY, Sat., M; Lyv. Washington_ ... ... i $5.00 NEW YORK 8y V! May 31, June 14, 28 L DAY, May 30 Lv. 1 Pullman roun| AM, wa_ide . Downtowr $8.00 NEW YORK Inclu all_expenses, Rall Fare, Breakfast, Lunch. Sighiseeing drive. /NDAY, Ma: Lv. Washington . N 5 AM. $3.50 PHILADELPHIA $3.25 CHESTER $3.00 WILMINGTON NDAYS, Jun: Washington .. ... PHILADELPHIA SIGHTSI TOURS Morning 5c fternoon $1.50 SEE FLYEES. CONSULT AGENTS All Steel Equipment Pennsylvania Railroad . ROACH uu Sty Why Suffer With Painful CORNS Lift Them Out With Fingers NO PAIN! NO BOTHER! After other mefhods have failed that stubborn callous ke coming back . Korn Remover on’ the anuoying eorn or calloss with h: little +E.Z KoRN REMOVER Eases the Pain Removes the CORN; our | | o'clock, | N | Mrs. Mildred Kohler Gears, POLITICAL WOMEN TOPLAN CAMPAIGN {Woman’s Party Workers’, Conference ‘Will Be Held { Here Saturday. Teading feminists of the country will assemble here Saturday, May 30, for & party workers’ conference of the Na- ! tional Woman’s Party. 4 Meeting at the Dodge Hotel at 10:30 the opening session will be | presided over by Mrs Hooker, state chairman of theWo ma | Party of Maryland. An address of w come will be made by Mrs. John Dick- inson Sherman, presidential commis- sioner of the George Washington Bi- | centennial ~ Celebration aund = former | president of the General Federation of | | Women’s Clubs, Mrs. Harvey W Wiley, widow of the “father” of the | pure food and drugs law and national N\ | chairman of the Woman's Party, will respond. | A feminist “experience meeting” will | be held in conjunction with an in- formal lunchecn on the opening da at which Mfss Sarah Grogan, a lead in the equal rights movement, will make the principal address. Succes ful organization methods will be ex- plained at the afternoon meeting by Mrs. Edith C. Salisbury, a member of | the ' governing board of Zonta; Miss | Grace Goodpasture, Soroptomist pres | dent; Miss Elizabeth Cullen, retiring president of Columbian Women. and publicity chairman for the Maryland Federation of Women's Clubs. A sightsceing tour of Washington and a banquet Saturday evening will close the business meeting. Miss Ruth | Hale, - founder of the Lucy Stone | League, who prefers to be known as | Heywood BEroun's campalgn manager \Y| | rather than as his wife, will be toast- mistress will be devoted to discus- | sions of publicity, with several well | known Washington correspondents | scheduled to speak, and & garden perty at the Alva Belmont House, Woman's Party headquerte; | TWO CHILDREN SLAIN, | MOTHER PLANNED SUICIDE | Woman, Depressed by Business Af- Arrested—Says She | Wanted to Drown Self. fairs, | By the Associated Press | SAN FRANCISCO, May 25.—Mrs. Bernice Foley, 30, coffee shop proprietor, | was arrested here today in connection with the deaths of her children, Paisy | and Robert Foley, 8 and 6 years old, respectively, who were found dead in their beds last night. Officers said the | children had been poisoned. | Mrs. Foley surrendered to two patrol- men, seying she had been despondent | over business affairs. Authorities quoted her as saying she had planned to end her life by walking into the ocean. Officers were summoned to the Foley apartment by Mrs. Lucille Irvine, the childre) “‘Hazel,” an employe of the coffee shop, stated “I am sorry, but this is the one wa; {out. Don’t think too hard of me.” |SILVER STANDARD SEEN | AS ECONOMIC NECESSITY | | Mexican Expert Comsiders Gold | Situation Responsible for Busi- mess Depression. . | By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, May 25.-=The fact that 65 per cent of the world’s minted gold is held by Prance and the United States necessitates a return to & gen- eralized silver monetary system at a fixed ratio of exchange, Constantino Perez Duarte, treasury expert, said in a statement published today. One of the basic causés of the pres- |ent business depession, he said, is the depreciation in the buying power of silver, upon which most of the world must’ tely for its purchases. He, said the decrease in silver pro- duction in Mexico was a principal rea- son for the economic crisis this country is experiencing. These Hands Know No Manhattan will protect yours too . . . and save you money on your weekly wash! SOME things are vital to a woman’s charm—regardless of her age. Soft, white hands &5 . vitality. Yet some Washington. | Donald H. S THE EVENIN Likes U. S. Libraries GENEVA STAFF WOMA BY GRETCHEN SMITH. ] HE United States has the finest | public libraries in the world, | believes Miss Marle Ginsberg, | economic librarian of the League of Nations, who as guest of the American ~ Association of University Women has arrived for a brief visit to This is the first visit of Miss Gins- berg to the United States, and since her arrival here two months ago as one of the delegates attending the confer- ence of the International Federation of University Women she has given con- siderable time and interest to visits to libraries and universities in different tions of the country. | “I think the American public libra- ries are 100 per cent ahead of thcse in other countries,” she said, “although I do not believe your university and col- lege libraries are any finer than those in_European centers of learning.” Librarians at Geneva, sald Miss Ginsberg, frequently are called upon to find publications in various languages to be used by delegates in the prepara- tion of speeches. | “One cf the greatest demands is for the Bible,” she said. “We find that although people like to use Bible quo- tations, they don't often know them. We have the Bible in at least 10 differ- ent languages, and among the 22 libra- rians in the library practically every major language in the world is spoken.” One of Miss Ginsberg's tasks is in- terpreting for conferences held in Ge- | neva, particularly for women's confer- ences unable to bear the expense of an | official interpreter. | “I learned as a child to speak five | Janguages,” she explained in fluent English, although this is Miss Gins- | berg’s first visit to an English-speaking | country. | “I find the interpretation of speeches | one of the most interesting things in the world. The psycholcgical irterpre- | tation is the most important part of a | correct translation of a speech. If one| is translating a French speech to a German audience, one must realize it must be presented in the way which will appeal to the German mind. This | is true with all speeches made in a city | like Genev: representatives | from all the world nations assemble.” | Amusing incidents sometimes occur in the conferences and assemblies at Geneva, due to the different languages spoken, Miss Ginsberg said. “One da: she recalled, “every one was- s0 tired from hearing speeches in many languages that when I translat- ed a German speech into French, and then back into German instead of Eng- lish, nobody noticed it except the speaker.” As honorary secretary of the Inter- | — CRASH KILLS SCIENTIST, | INJURES TWO OTHERS California Institute Worker, Who Recently Theorized on Death, Is Auto Victim. By the Associated Press. SAN BERNARDINO, Calif, May 25 —Dr. Karl Josef Belar, 36, a biological | research worker, was killed when his | utomobile skiGded and overturned on the Bear Valley Highway yesterda; Two companions were injured. | Dr. Belar wa research associate | |in biology at California Institute of Technology, Pasaden: | The injured are Dr. Hans Gaffron, research fellow in geology, and Mrs | Ilen Erlinson, 30, Pasadema, a student. | Their car was one of three on a desert | outing. | _Dr. Belar, in a recent address, said the old definition of death as “the clos- | |ing of individual existence” must be | replaced with a newer definition that “death is the irreversible stoppage of | the function of life. | Man Killed in Radio Row. | © TAYLORVILLE, 101, May 25 (#)—A | dispute about a noisy radio resulted in | the death yesterday of Bernard Grigsby, 22 years old, a barber. He was shot Saturday night in his shop by Albert | Bores, 36 years old, witnesses said. | | Bores, who ‘lived upstairs, came down | to complain about the sound the radio | made. He told police he shot the barber | | in seif-defense after a quarrel. In eight months A. A.Gross of South- |ampton, England, built unaided an | eight-room house. Washday . s : a pleasant disposition women still sacrifice them to pay for weary washday. Then they pathetically try to erase the lines stamped on their faces by washday worries—by aching backs — by tired muscles, only to learn that been washed What false economy! Right here at Manhattan we end all such grief and worry. And save you money by saving your clothes. For here the famous Net Bag System keeps out the wear that wears clothes out! Pure, palm oil soap and soft, filtered water make doubly sure your clothes will keep that fresh new look. And our modern methods get them home to you in exactly 3 days. Protect your charm and happiness before it’s too late. Telephone Decarur 1120 today and let our representative call and explain money saving services. CALL DECATUR a week of beauty care has away by a single washday. 1120 ANHATTAN Laundfy Net Bags Save You Money - By Saving Your Clothes ¥IRGINIA OFFICE: Vl’ON BOULEVARD AND MILITARY ROAD, ROSSLYN, VIRGINIAg G__STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MAY 25, 1931, VISITS HERE. MISS MARIE GINSBERG. | national Club of Geneva, Miss Gins- | berg comes into close contact with per- | sons from all parts of the world. To HEAD ACHE When you feel a headache coming on, it's time to take Bayer Aspirin, Two tablets will head it off, and you can finish your shopping in comfort. Anyover-exertionisapt to bring pain in some form. Ilead pains from crowds or noise. Limbs that ache from sheer weariness. Joints sore from the beginnings of acold. Systemic pain. The remedy is rest. But immediate relief is yours for the taking; a pocket tin of Bayer Aspirin is protection from pain wherever you go. You never know when these tablets may save the day, avoid breaking an fl\(anflm(‘nl. spare you from a miserable evening or sleepless night. Get real aspirin. Look for Bayer on the box. Read the proven directions_ found inside = every genuine Bayer package. They cover headaches, colds, sore throat, toothache, neuralgia, neuritis, sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, muscular pains—and other suffer- ing which need not be endured. your acal WE SERVE IS NATIONAL PARKS TO SAVE TIME MONEY... WORRY AND GET THE BEST MAIL NOW Chicago & North Wi 3 of the West ¢han National Parks C.&N.W. ". N. Hale . City Chica THE OVERLAND ROUT! & NorthWestern Pacitic nion Zion-Bryce-Grand Canyon Yellowstone-Grand Teton Rocky Mountain Hoover (Boulder) Dam C. 201 Franklin Trust Bldg. 15th and Chestnut Sts. Philadelphia, Pa. Please send me complete information and booklets about promote better international under- standing she organizes International dinners, luncheons, lectures and chil- |- dren’s parties. “One of the greatest factors in the promotion cf international understand- ing and good will." she said, “is teach- ing children to know each other. I have sometimes planned parties in Geneva which have been enjoyed equally by little children of more than 20 na. tionalities.” ‘Tomorrow evening a dinner will be given for Miss Ginsberg by the Ameri- can Association of University Women at the club house, 1634 I street. After the dinner Miss Ginsberg will speak on some of her experiences in Geneva and on the progressive work being car- ried on by the International Federation of University Women. Miss Ginsberg was born in 1894 in Poland, near the Russian border, and in 1905, at the time of the first Ri sian_revolution, she moved with her family to Berlin, where she received her early education. Later she studied at the University of Geneva, where she received degrees first in pedagogy and later in economics. During the war Miss Ginsberg was in Swit and and as part of the hu- manitarian_work which she undertook during that period she adopted a little Belglan girl refugee. Like the majority of those who have studied International problems at Ge- neva, Miss Ginsberg believes that world peace and prosperity will come only through an international economic and tariffl understanding, with the elimina- tion of high tariffs by every nation in the world. These tablets do not depress the heart. Nor do they upset the stomach. They do nothing but stop the pain. Every druggist has Bayer Aspirim i in the pocket size, and in bottles. If you wish to save money, buy the fiemnne tablets by the hundred. 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