Evening Star Newspaper, July 28, 1931, Page 10

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.FOOT AGONY ? —ease it, end it, with BLUE-JAY CORN PLASTERS 25¢ The quick, safe treat- ment—for 31 years. Made by the sur- gical dressing house of BAUER & BLACK SPECIAL For July and August WIRE YOUR HOUSE Main Hall: g Room: ight Shower; Switch; 1 Plus. Dining Room: 3-Light Shower; Switch. Kitchen: Ceiling Uni iteh, 2nd Hall: . Rosette; 3-way Switch. 3 Bed Rooms: 2-Light Showersi Pull C'ain. ing Unit: Open Shade: Switch. Wiring, Fixtures and Bulbs, , Complete as Listed, Installed, $100 Telephone NAtional 0140-2622 and Representative Will Call C. A. Muddiman Co. 911 G St. N.W. 'ECONOMICAL AND EASY TO MAKE JAM AND JELLIES Don’t let sum- mer go by with- out putting up some preserves, jellies and jam: Your family will thank you and with every glass and jar you open next winter, you’ll save real money. Sugar is being sold ev where at a price that is unusually low, and bargains in fruit may be expected throughout the season. There is a place in every meal for | canned fruit of some sort. You can make economiczl'd»cscrts and salads with them that ¢ »: wholesome and ILLINOIS PLUNGES | EARLY IN POLITICS ‘Hot Weather and Depression Ripen Election Crop of Candidates. - | Spectal Dispateh to The Star. | CHICAGO, July 28.—Hot weather and | hard times have ripened & crop of po- |litical developments far ahead of sched- ‘ule in Tllinots, where the candidate | harvest is in swing nine months ahead |of_the next primary. | There already is the prospect of & | bumper erop of Republican seekers for the gubernatorial nomination, while | candidates for congressional nomina- nons spring up almost overnight. Grooms Lewls for Presidency. ‘Much interest locally is shown in the efforts of Mayor Anton J. Cermak to nurture the national ambitions of Sen- ator James Hamilton Lewis, who is be- lived to have a real interest in the | prospect of taking second place on the next Democratic presidential ticket. | Senator Lewis, who won his election by |a majority of 750,000 over Ruth Hanna McCormick, the Republican nominee, last November, is keeping sharply in the limelight to stimulate his growth in the national consclousness. He is the “favorite son” presidential candi- date of Illinois Democrats. James Simpson, jr., 26-year-old son of the chairman of the board of Mar- <hall Field & Co., is adding spice to the | congressional situation by announcing his candidacy for the Republican nomis nation _in the thirteenth Illinoif dis- trict. The youthful scion of a rich fam- ily, known as a sportsman, prefers poli- tics to merchandising and promises to wage a hard fight against a big list of veterans. McCormick Friends Active. At the same time, from Rockford come reports that Republicans there are talking of bringing out former | Congresswoman Ruth Hanna McCor- mick for the race in the new fourteenth Illinois district. Mrs. McCormick has | kept her political organization over the State intact and is said to hanker for ! return to active politics. - The yield of Republican gubernatorial \lsplrnnts is unusually high already, |even with the nomination scheduled as |far away as next April. “Big Bill" ‘Thompson, Chicago's former mayor, is whooping it up for Len Small, his tor- | mer crony in the Small-Thompson-Lor- imer-Smith combination. Former Gov. Small is expected to blossom out offi- |cially at the time of the State fair in Kankakee during September. Oscar Carlstrom, attorney general for {two terms, is in bloom offfcially, as is \\’Vll]i.am H. Malone, former State tax | commissioner. Gov. Louis E. Emmer- ‘son either is to run for re-election against this group or will have a can- | didate of his own. In the meantime the Democrats are lslmng tight and forestalling as much ns pnssible Bn) prospect of a split within ran| They see a chance for \rarr}lng all State offices and are keep- |ing “their crop of job aspirants well under cover. A HAWES, AT MANILA, URGES INDEPENDENCE Missouri Senator Repeats Plea to Filipinos—Will Start Home This Coming Saturday. By the Associated Press. MANILA, July 28.—Senator Harry B. Hawes of Missouri, addressing a joint sassion of the Philippine Legislature to- day, reiterated his view that the “pres- ent destructive uncertainty to both American and Philippine interests can be _settled only by independence.” He urged the Filipinos to continue their independence campaign. Hawes warned that because of the press of business before Congress it would re- quire persistence to get the independ- THE EVENING Wins Wings D. C. YOUTH GETS ARMY COMMIS:! LIEUT. RICHARD C. HUGHES, United States Army Air Corps, who be- came a full-fledged fiyer last month when he graduated from the Advanced Flying School, Kelly Field, Tex. He is here visiting his mother, Mrs. Eugene Collister, 1400 Ingraham street, before reporting for duty at Langley Field. ORQERS can be traced by telephone in a few minutes, and -delays explained to customers inthe same way. Modern business depends on the telephone to maintain contacts with out-of- town customers. It's quick, clear,and cheap. BOOKSELLER SUES HOWARD U. GROUP Charges Co-operative Store on Campus Violates Law and Hurts His Trade. Joseph H. Maxwell, a bookseller of 2018 Georgia avenue, asked District Supreme Court yesterday for an injunc- tion to restrain Howard University, Em- mett J. Scott, its secretary-treasurer, and other officials and profi rs from con- tinuing the operation of the Co-opera- tive University Book Store on the camp- us of the university. The store, he claims, is being carried on in a govern- ment-owned building by Government emx:loyel with no payment for light or rent. Maxwell charged that & number of school professors are interested in the project and have withheld from him & list of books needed by the students until one day before the & semester.' This, he conj done so he could not § and the ks would be bought on the campus. He declared that from a showing of & profit of $15,000 in 1929, his business had deteriorated to only $1,000 profit because of the alleged illegal actions of the defendants. Named as defendants also are Morde- cal W. Johnson, president of the uni- versity; Victor B. Deyber, 3109 Macomb street; Michael O. Dumas, 1804 New Hampshire avenue; John R. Hawkins, 1352 Q street; Jesse E. Mooreland, New York City; Secretary of the Treasury ylfllll:m and Secretary of the lnl.erhr ur. The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company (Bell System) 725 Thirteenth Street N. W. MEtropolitan 9900 STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C. TUESDAY, JULY 28, 19 LEAVING AT DINNER TIME The Convenience Train fto: CINCINNATI LOUISVILLE . ST. LOUIS CHICAGO :45 P.M. (1) 817P.M. * 348 AM.S ® ASTAMS 905 A.M. " 11:30 A.M. (cs1) 11:50 AM. » S45P.M. * ... 430 P.M. " Similar Fine Service Returning © Steepers for Charleston and Hun W.Van may b secupied masl 8:00°%. M. . INDIANAPOLIS Now you can leave at the most convenient time of day—just after the close of business, and just before dinner time. After a de- licious, well-served dinner you can spend a few pleasant hours in a luxurious Library Lounge, and then retire to a comfortable night’s restin the very latest type of Pullman. . In fact, on this new train you can enjoy trav- eling at’its best —carefree, comfortable and convenient. Try it on your next trip west. You will arrive in better mental and physical condition to start the next day’s program. For shorter trips ride in the Imperial Salon Cars (nothing quite like them on any other railroad). De luxe service for the mere cost of your railroad ticket. Personal Sercvice Just telephone us where you want to go. We will make your reservation and deliver tickets to your home or office. J. B. EDMUNDS, G. A. Ticket Office: 714-14th St. N.-W., Tel. National 0748 CHESAPEAKE «n« QHIO delicious. Jellies also make a taste- | dnce question. considored. but stated, pleasing dessert when served with | “You will, by orderly, peaceful persua- cream cheese and crackers. And | sion, convince Americans of the justice when you have rice pudding, top |of your cause, each serving witha spoonful of jam. B, “If your united national aspirations Remember, too, that sweet relishes | for independence are withheld it will made of vexetables ave delicious | Preed unhappiness and discontent which Withi tsat. midEaeh > Watch | liberty-loving Americans will not per- . o { mit.” the Senator said. fruit and vegetable market 5o y¢ - upescly it feaciol S snaich - can take advantage of the bargain- | piate Tha eries of “Mabubay !> (Long day prices. Preserve with refined | jive), cane sugar. The Sugar Institute, \ Senator Hawes will sail for home Sat- | urday. tOWEST PRICE WILLARD HISTORY! Genuine Willard Batteries Look for the Willard Sign of Your Local Service Station WASHINGTON BATTERY CO. 1146 19th St. N.W. North 0142 “It so happens I don’t smoke... BUT I’ve noticed recently that more of my girl friends are smok- ing CHESTERFIELD, and I asked why. “One of them said that CHESTER- FIELDS really are milder and taste better—that there is nothing strong or sharp or bitter about them. “Another one spoke up and said that she too liked the taste of CHESTER- FIELDS; but that she was especially pleased with the package —so neat and - attractive. Chesterfields—she added—are - made right — properly filled —and buta evenly; and she thought possibly they were using a better cigarette paper. - *8till another-one agreed with all we’d said. She’d been smoking CHESTER- FIELDS for a long, long time, and had. - always liked them ; but she also liked the way they were advertised. The advertis- ing seemed to her to be the truth and the whole truth—it wasn’t always knockmg somebody or something !’ ©1931, Licestr & Myzns Tosacco Coy

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