Evening Star Newspaper, July 9, 1931, Page 11

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D, C, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1931. Quality Meats at A&P Markets! is the care given the meat before you take it home. A&P markets are equipped with modern cases and machinery, - in charge of skilled managers, an efficient guarantee of ' protection, If you are thrifty and seek the best, start today to take advantage of the vaiues offered in quality meats at A&P markets. EDUCATION MAKES | [Whont Coune] | STUDENT QUTCAST Russian Studying in U. S. Be- comes Man Without Coun- try on Graduating. soundness of our palicy . . . to QUALITY MEATS AT LOWEST PRICES. It is most important at all times to insist on high quality in meats, icularly in the Summer should one be careful and certain that this quality is assured. Equall Fresh Top-Mast e T FILLET o+ | Frying Chickens = 37¢ HADDOCK | Jeg of Lamb = 25¢ &= 19e¢ for this week-end. No waste TENDER Fresh Ground Beef ». 18¢ and always welcome at the . F F Roasts i 15¢ /5" 25¢ Bottom Round Steak. . . ..» 33¢ table. Include Top-Mast in your menu for tomorrow. Fresh Made Potato Salad ». 20c Fresh Made Cole Slaw. , .» 20c Lean Plate Beef........n 10c Sunnyfield Sliced Bacon. . % ®. pus. 17¢ RD UNIVERSITY, Calif, July 3.—The elation that comes to the coliege graduate rs he is handed his diploma is not for Paul M. Narbutov- skih and perhaps a huntired more Rus- sian students in the United States. r them the hard-worked-for degree means not that the “world is now my oyster,” but that “I am now & man without & country.” | Graduation terminates their student status under the jmmigration law and | makes them subject to deportation. Deportation Serious, i What deportation would signify is| largely a matter for the individual im- | ation, but for Narbutovskih, son of an anti-bolshevist merchant, it would, he says, most likely mean something he doesn’t care to contemplal WHEAT POLICY PLEA channel with a view to clearing up the ambiguity of the positions (of these Urges Grain Retention by Board Before Leaving for students), but to no resuit.” Kansas Home: By the Associated Press. STANFOI While They Last! Carl Brand Fruitsfor Salad 255 25¢ A‘linild quantity of this high quality Fruits for Salad has been sent to e 25c prige is exceptionally af sidering the high quality. .@ o] PAUL NARBUTOVSKIH. . 19¢ Select Veal Cutlets. . ....» 45¢ Shoulder Lamb Roast. .. .» 17¢ FRESH CLEANED CRAB MEAT The students, Narbutovskih declares, eannot become citizens. Many of them re not go bacl , ‘and most of them, do not want to. Nearly all of them are anti-bolshevik. Hard fo Get Jobs, Although they fesl that a benevolent administration of the immigration law T may save them from immediate depor- | Senator Capper of Kansas made & tation, there is no assurance they will | final appeal today to the Federal Farm not eventually be required to leave the | Board to aniounce a definite policy not country. This indefinite status makes | to sell any of its wheat holdings for 1t difficult to obtain employment. four months, before leaving Washington A representative of Stanford who has 58, been endeavoring unsuccessfuily to ob- | , if _adopted,” said tain _some official action which would ‘apper, “would be o clarify the status of these Russian ref- | penefit to our people in Kansas and in ugees and &0 make their futures more | the West. I have urged, too, that the secure declared that these youths are | board scll none of its wheat until the | “good material for American citizens.” | price has reached at least 85 cents a and expressed the hope that when their | pughel.” sltuation becomes generally known some ~The Kansas Senator sald he had had way will be found to remedy it. | no assurance that anything would be | not to &ell at existing market prices BIRTH CONTROL SCORED | and not to sell more than 5,000,000 BY BISHOP W. J. HAFEY | dushe st”wieat in any one month (Ready for the Pan) Sea Trout .......™15¢ Croakers Boston Mackerel. . ™ 18¢c FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES California and Arizona CANTALOUPES 153w 254 2:19 Honey Ball Melons . . . . 2% 25¢ Fancy Ripe Bananas . . .4 [9¢c; 23c Fancy Cucumbers . . . =il White or Yellow Squash . . .m™ 5e Fresh Florida EAR CORN Mississippi Lump Lb. 49¢ Regular Lump Lb. 29¢ Claw Meat . 23¢ Quaker Maid Beans '™ 4%-25¢ Quaker Maid Ketchup, 3 ). 25¢; 2 4> 2§¢ Libby’s Corned Beef .’ -21¢ Del Monte Peaches, 2 = == 39¢ | &z, Butter Sifme . 2 m 59¢ «unys Pineapple . . .w = 2ic | Sunnyfield Print Butter, 2 ™ 65¢ Del Monte Pears™.." I5¢c; mn20c | Wildmere Fresh Eggs “tome 25¢ owaes Pineapple . . .= |9¢c | Sunnyfield Sliced Bacon %™ 17c Del Monte Peas . . 3 =« == 49c | R&R Boned Chicken . % == 55¢c Del Monte Corn . , . = an |5¢ Blue Peter Sardines . .*%™ 10c Del Monte String Beans =« «= 22¢ { Corned Beef Hash . . %= |0c Del Monte Spinach . .=« == |4c | Cam'bell's Tomato Soup, 3 =~ 23¢ Cut Stringless Beans ;' 3% 22¢ Waldorf Toilet Paper 3 - 14c | done to meet these requests, the board | still adhering to its announced policy the coming year. This policy, | Senator Capper holds, does not meet Fells Catholie Daughters “Women | the situation at all, with wheat down | to 50 cents a bushel. Are Foregoing Laws of God It is understood that Senator Cap- " per had an opportunity to discuss the WSy Sodts. wheat situaticn with President Hoover By the Associated Preas, during his visit here. RATLANTIO CITY. N. J. Juxvhvit = . ishe illiam J. Hafey of Raleigh, N. & Seierday hig, the Cainotc Daugn: CAPITAL TAX COUNSELOR ters of America “women are foregoing | the laws of God in order to buy fur| LOSES SUIT FOR $250,000 coats and luxuries.” He referred to Sy propaganda favoring birth ‘;”".""] .91:‘5 |Rhode Island Supreme Court Up- ViNg | holds Directed Verdict Favoring Asserting many_people in ~the | United States are geiting into a pa- | ganistic state of mind, Bishop Hafey | By the Associated Press. id “We are reaping what has PROVIDENCE, R. I, July 9.—A di- . Catholic women must not sit |rected verdict for the Lorraine Manu- idly by and do nothing. They must |facturing Co. in a $250,000 suit brought settle down to hard thinking and give hy Howe P. Cochran of Washington, this problem & great deal of consid- D. C., was upheld vesterday by the eration.” g | State Supreme Court. He urged the organiza'ion’s maga- | 1In an opinion by Justice John W. zine. Woman's Voice, to emphasize the |Seweeney. the eourt sustained the ac- proper sphere of woman. He criticized | tfon of Judge Leonidas Pouliot, jr., of magazines which contend that women |the Superior Court directing the jury should not, attempt to raise large fam- | {o return a verdiei favoring the com- ilies on incomes which can support only | pany in Cochran’s suit to recover for Manufacturing Company. Fancy Home Grown TOMATOES 3 Lbs. zsc 4 Ears 193 one or two children properly and de- |services in adjusting certain of the clared such magazines were examples |company’s tax matters with the Gor of immoral literature now flooding the country., ROBBER SUSPECT'SAALIBI FOUND TO BE CORRECT Detective Cox Learns Jack Ross Was at Work in Newark at Time of Hold-up Here. Investigating the alibi of John Mar- tin Ross, alias J 1, of New- ne of the three so-called | to ," identified es having ipat $6,500 pay roll hold-up the morning of ® | increase of 15.000 baptized members, | ernment. and had given him a $2,500 bonus. Mr. Cochran is a tax counsellor. LUTHERANS GAIN 27,540 | Missouri 8ynod Total Now 1,137,- 000, Says Announcement, OTTAWA, July 9 (#).—The Missouri Synod of the Lutheran Church now h 137,000 members, Rev. Mr. W. Dall- ¥r*|ceberg Lettuce, 21 23¢c, 2 = 29¢ Bunch Beets and Carrots . . 2 b= 9c Fresh Stringless Beans . . . 3™ 17¢c FreshLimaBeans . . . . . 2m™25¢c Fancy Ripe Sowega WATERMELONS Scot-Tissue Toilet Paper,3-:23¢c Lang's Asst. Pickles . . %™ 10c fun Olives . 2 v I5¢; & 19¢ seme Olives . . 2x 10c; i 29¢ Sultana Asst. Jellies . ~. = [0c fie Preserves™ o mame” e 22e P Preserves “Taman™ ‘wr 8lcC: P&G Soap . . . . 5==|9% Guest Ivory Soap . . 4 == |9¢c Ivory Soap . . . 3 me e 20c ool . . ... . . T Selox« . . . ..5:, i, wneibec De Luxe Bon Ami Powder = 20c 12,000 communicants and 2,540 voting mbers. UALITY Maraschino Cherries s 0¢; s |7¢ — - uaranteed ¢ Japan imported nearly 230‘000,000 eact 40Q¢ : My-T-Fine Choc.Dessert, 2 == |9¢ Bolaotp, worth of products from United Hold-up witnesses looked at scores States lnst yoar. — OUTSTANDING REGULAR LOW PRICES ATTENTION ICED COF FEE White House Evap. Milk . . 3 == 20¢ as participants, but it was not until the “hatless bandits” were seen that theyj TS, LSt L0 Will your coffee pass this Ice Cold test? . . s R Tl oLt P - s soschpmghss ey Reliable Peas, Real Quah:fy « o o meon |G I .aundry : Del Monte Asparagus Tips o= S e oA T e Rl e 8 0 CLOCK 4 i lgc L:l:?eu;rizztsed Spaghetti . . ¢ ;’.l..."' :."5:2 FovKiteRensor For the Washing RED CIRCLE that he had learned Ross was at work pointments o:ll_v e Standard Quality Tomatoes . . 3 =« == 22¢ Laundry Machine . 25¢ i S lona Soaked Lima Boane " 3= 5 | 3oae1T7c | 27 15c Carrotsand Peas . . . . . .= |Qc e R S R o s Bl . e 208 [l o BOKAR ‘/zfinlb- lsc :‘i’_- 29(: g::\asv::ef ?’Irunos ; 2'}..":. 25.0; 2 19¢ 3 Cakes P a]mo!lve Soas, ch g et a:htfiorngsh;:fojfil::mns < AL .:'-Igz 1 Pkg Palmolive Bea 8, JC }’,{:“;f,‘,‘;fi,’.,?",‘,’}f,‘;;{‘;:’ :::ccl:u.::m?e‘r“:f' Nucoz Nut Marggarinc g . gPRfEéAL 20c 32¢ SORT——. . JCFlsCo. .y wo. wbi2Sen W e 72 Shredded Wheat . . o . + « » 2 Peas. [9c C & C Ginger Ale ™massy™ 2 Boties 25¢ Sunnyfield Con Fiibes . . . . 2% I3 Clicquot Club Ginger Ale, 2 Botes 29c Post Bran Flakes . . . . . . . . . Pu 12¢ Try-Me Beverages . . . 4 3 'mie 23c Gold Medal Wheaties . . . . 2 Pass. 25c¢ High Rock Beverages. . 4w 3 ‘s’ 25c¢ Quaker Crackels . . . . « + « 2 Pan. 23c¢ Prince of Ales Ginger Ale 3 Zus 25c Encore Macaroni ‘and Spighetti 3 Pkes. 20c | Cloverdale Lith-A-Limes 2 2= 25c American Cheese . . . . . - %% L. 25¢ A&P Pure Grape Juice r. 18¢; . 35¢° Rajah Salad Dressing . .« - - « 15¢ Budweiser o .« <« v v . oo . . Bole |16c || Kraft’s Mayonnaise . . . . & = 20c Hires Root Beer Extract . . . . Bowe 22c ] Sparkle Gelatin . . . . 3 Pkgs. 20c‘ Nectar. Tea. . . .. . . % |5¢ % 29 Old Dutch Cleanser . 2 == |5¢ Flash Hand Soap . . .= 10c April 1, Detective Richard J. Cox has | me! obtained information that the prisoner was at work at the plant of & chemical company in Newark at the time of the Octagon Super SUDS Octagon pany and received definite information zhn Ross actually worked there that ay. 4 1/°% and his companions have admit- participation in more than e acore of hold-ups in Newark. Richmond. this|[ f£iheng Covernment cmployees. city and other places. All denied knowl- | 4 SESSEe bey Nllvoutup. 1 Address Box 462-V " WASHINGTON BOY SECOND | el IN ORATORICAL HONORS | — Cloiee Crane, 15, Eastern High Stu- dent, Takes Part in Contest at Detroit Optimist Convention. Cloise Crane, 15-year-old Eastern| High School student, won second honors -in the oratorical contest held at Detroit yesterday in conjunction with | the Optimist Club International Con- vention. ne. who is a member of the Boys' and Junior Optimist,Clubs here, has been actively identified with forensic affairs as & member of the Eastern High debating team, and as the head of two committees which visited the late President Harding and former President Regular Price has sent representatives to the speaking | |- QI TS NARRLTREI contest the Washington youths have | captured a first David Wolfe of this eity won first place in the competition last year. James Jepson, 15, of Erie, Pa., was the first, prize winner yesterday. | MADE IT FAMOUS A DELICIOUS SUBSTANTIAL MEAL . , for3 Prepared bot in 12 minutes Chef Boy-ar-dee INSTANT Spaget-tee Dinner and a second prize. V'"f‘ An instantly refreshing hot weather drink that cools, quenches thirst and appeals to every taste. Order Lipton’s - today. It costs no more. TASTIEST ICED TEA' Fruit e Fiavored CHOICEST ORANGE PEKOE & PEKOE R R s R RAI

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