Evening Star Newspaper, August 7, 1931, Page 9

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ho Founded an Ideal E have adopted each new improve- ment in mechanism as experience has developed it, until today the Fussell-Young new plant stands as a model of equipment, with its new in- stallation of the fast Miller Liberty Freezers, which are responsible for that WONDERFULLY EVEN and MATCHLESSLY SMOOTH TEX- TURE not to be found in any other UST eighty years ago saw the Bl GF 255 rehm. “Birth of Ice Cream” right here in Washington. Jacob Fussell, the father of this business, made the first ice cream ever sold commercially. It was the beginning of what is today one of the greatest food industries in the country. Not just a dainty sweet; but recognized by leading dietitians as a most nutritious food. It truly does make a difference what ice cream you buy. If you value the maximum in nutrition, combined with dainty and appealing flavors and want to be SURE OF PROTECTED PUR- ITY from freezer to you, be sure it is FUSSELL’S REAL CREAM ICE CREAM—the first ice cream ever made for commercial sale and developed to be the BEST ICE CREAM SCIENCE, SKILL and EQUIPMENT CAN MAKE. With inherent Quaker principles, Jacob Fussell adopted certain standards for his infant ice cream industry that have .guided and governed us, his suc- cessors. It was a standard which has made Fussell Ice Cream THE SUPE- RIOR OF ALL. First in the quality of the ingredients used; and then in the manner of making. It is worth walking to the store that features Pure Foods, for that store sells Fussell's Real Cream Ice Cream be- cause it is pure food. Served at Fountains and packed at the factory in sealed pint and half pint packages for convenient carrying. Fussell-Young Ice Cream Co. Plant: 1310 Wisconsin Avenue Phone: West 2306-7-8-9 —even on the hottest day! Why? Because his LINEN SUIT is at its best—washed and pressed to perfection and spic-and-span from the WASHING- TON LAUNDRY! Emulate him! Get that “on parade” feeling in your Summer suit—linen, Palm Beach, seersucker or flannels —washed and pressed to measure, as you like them. They'll be properly handled here, because we have the proper equipment; the finest washing, drying and press- ing machines money can buy (ap- proved by the manufacturers of Summer cloth- ing), and we know how to use them. We're just as near as your tele- phone. Call WEST 1020. We will call for and deliver your suit, promptly. hington Laundry 27th and K Sts. N.W. / o |RETIRED ATTORNEY DIES AT MANASSAS John H. Nelson, Formerly of Dis- trict, Author of Several Books. Speeial Dispatch to The Star. MANASBAS, Va., August 7.—John H. | Nelson, prominent practicing attorney | in Washington until three years ago, | when failing health forced his retire-| ment to his residence here, died yester- day afternoon. Mr, Nelson was a native of Prince | William County and was born near Dumfries, August 14, 1866. Foliowizg his preparatory education at the Brmm- ville School and Bethel Military Acad- | emy, Warrenton, he attended the Uni- versity of Virginia, graduating in law | with the class of '88. He first prac- ticed in Prince William County and| at Leesburg and moved to Washington | in 1899, where he was first associated with Morgan Beach. Specializing in matters of interstate commerce, he was connected with the legal department|D of the Interstate Commerce Commis- | sion for many years, representing it in | Washington and at numerous points | throughout the country. He was me} -u'.hm of several books, the most note- | worthy being “Nelson on Interstate Commerce,” and was a frequsnt con- tributor to periodicals on interstate matters, and as a_member of the Sons of the American Revolution and a close student of history, he wrote numercus historical papers. Services 'En be _conducted tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Primitive Baptist Church here, the edifice which was rebullt and modernized by the de- | ceased recently as a_memorial to his | parents, with Elder R. H. Pittman of Luray officiating. Mr. Nelson was a bachelor. He is survived by two brothers, James E. of Menassas and C. P. Nelson of Hunting- ton, W. Va., and Manassas, and tvo | lilun. Mrs. Elizabeth Weedon and Mrs. | Albert Speiden of this place. Bishop Hobson Recovering. | WORCESTER, Mass., August 7 (#).— | Right Rev. Henry W. Hobson of Cin- cinnati, Ohio, Bishop Coadjutor of the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio, | underwent an operation at Memorial Hospital Tuesday night. for the removal | of m« appendix, it was announced yes- | terday. He is resting comfortably. Recommend CHAMBERS |- Ambulances | Clean, Fresh and SANITARY ! (= es Lowest in City | $4.00 Any Place in D. C. | Call Col. 0432 your trust enced funeral director like Deal, serving the public for many years. Then you know that rything will be as you want it, and that the prices ever you ton, our and For more years Deal has been serv- ing the people of Washing- FUNERAL TOMORROW Services for Conrad Mueller to Be Held at Home. Funeral services for Conrad Mueller, 64, .mmanntmumymruy-u, who died Wednesday at Garfield Hos- pital, will be held at his’ home, 635 Quebec place, tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Burial will be in Fort Lincoln Cemetery. Two dluzhteu. Mrs. Eda S. Wolff, Clarendon, Va., and Lena B. Mueller, ‘Washington, and two sons, John C. and E’rnes& Mueiler, both of this city, sur- vive, LONG-TIME RESIDENTS DIE IN NEARBY TOWNS | Heat Believed to Have Hastened|Ls Death of Three—Two Women Succumb. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md, August 7.— Death Fas claimed three long-time resi- lents of Prince Georges County within (he last few d ‘The heat is believed | to have hastened the death of each. Charles Meader, 81 years old, a resi- dent of Bladensburg for half a century, died Wednesday at Providence Hos- |} pital, Washington, following a stroke. Serwces will be held tomorrow morn- ing at 9 o'clock at St. Jerone's Oa- tholic Church here. Interment will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Washing- ton, D. C. Mr. Meader leaves a sister, Junemann, 909 Fourth street ‘Washington. . Anna Rose Wilsop, who died Tuesday at her home at Park, was burfed in St. John's Church Cemetery there this rnoon She was 88 years old, an widow of Thomas Wilso: !he hld been living in the College Park com- munity ' for abowt 60 years. Services for Mrs. Anne E. Loveless, widow of J. C. Loveless, sr., who died Wednesday ‘at her home in Berwyn, will be held tomorrow morning at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church there. In- terment will be at Ammendale. The Loveless family has lived in the Berwyn section for many yem Deaths Reported ‘The following deaths have ;‘%u\rbv Health Depariment .l'lb':“ rfufl!d Roberta E. Jarvis. 86, le t] o O ader. 'rovidence Hospital, Con R s xS Galll, rer Hy Hr:‘mfn B. Dull, 35, Walter Reed o aCharies N. Hansom. ir., 9 month, Sibley lu Mullings, § months, Children's Hos- h ' Dew, s 1 month, St. Ann's In- fant_Asylu Tafant of Max and Sylvla Welnstein, 30 minutes, Georgetown Hogpital. 9. Preedmen's Hospital aters. 56 4 St 156 i R o B, es Brown. Freedm: William_Cook, 32. Gallinge: al Helen Waters. 21, 5008 Eméry b Fugene I. Lowe. "9 months, en route Emergency Hospital 17Ty Braxton 3 ‘months, Children’s Hos- o in an experi- one who has been pay will be fair. than twenty giving to them a service high in quality and very reasonable in price. Visit showroom any time, make your own com- parisons. glAL FUNERAL HOME inc. r reference, HAsk yournezghbor H STREET. ’Hl)NtfilLIlCOLN udo-ezot The Greatest SHOE SALE THOMPSON FUNERAL HELD IN CAPITAL CANADA DRYS DEFEATED Island, Alllllt 7 (#)—~The -Liberal vernment 1 Edward Noted New York hwyerto!em“ Buried in Gotham After Serv- ices Conducted Here. The body of Henry Thompson, prom- inent member of the New York h-r and uncie of Arthur Lee Thompson, ‘manager of the Thompson Datries here, was taken to New York last night for burial today in Woodlawn Cemetery. Funeral services for Mr. Thompson who died at Takoma Park Blnluflum after & fliness, were held last night at the Nevius funeral home, 924 Nev Yormm;e_r‘{im Vlv‘llu:mn’i. of Takoma Par tist Church, oficiating. He had been a patient at the sani- hflun for about a _year. Two sisters, Misses Grace and Theresa Thompson, both of Washington, also survive. Mr. Thompson was graduated from Colgate University in 1872 and later attended New York University, where he was awarded a degree in law. He became a member of the firm of Brown, Hall & Vnnderpool lnd later of the firm of Freedman, & Brown. In 1906 he was elected & trustee of New York University, and received the norary degree of doctor of laws there in 1913. In 1926 he gave a series of ‘Thompson mhollflhlpa to Colgate, amounting to $50,000. He was a member of the Manhattan Chess Club, Bankers’ Club, Delta Upsilon mtzmny and Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society. THE WEATHER District of Columbia—Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow, not much change in temperature, gentle southwest and west. winds. Maryland—Partly cloudy, not so warm in southeast portion tonight; to- morrow cloudy, not so warm in east portion, moderate southwest shifting to gentle east winds. Vitginia—Mostly fair tonight; tomor- row partly cloudy, possibly local showers in the mountains, not much change in temperature, gentle to moderate south- ‘west winds. in the history of this company GREATEST VALUE EVER OFFERED/ YOUCAN ALWAYS AVE AT 2 ilflll West Virginia—Mostly fair tonight and tomorrow, not much change in temperature, . Record for 24 Hours. ‘Thermometer—4 p.m., 93; 8 p.m,, 85; 12 midnight, 78; 4 am., 73; 8 am, 77; noon, 91 Barome! pm., 20.92; g ., 20.93; 12 mmnum,nu 4..1: 20.96; 8 am., 29.99; noon, 20.97. DWYER, O - |~ Highest temperature, 95, occurred at e Towest 3:45 p.m. yesterday; tempera- 2, occurred at 6 a.m. today. ‘Temperature same date year— 97; lowest, 69. Tide Tables. (Furnished by United States Coast and Geodetic Survey.) ‘Today—Low tide, 8:57 a.m. and 8:30 p.m.; high tide, 1:57 and 2:17 p.m, 9:27 pm.; high tide, 2:51 . and 2:16 pm. The Sun and Moon. ‘Today—Sun rose 5:13 a.m.; sun sets 7:14 pm. 6 am. and @ The election was regarded as ‘s vote of confidence in the of the federal government. enforcement of the prohibition act by the Llh*lh Tplri}‘ was on;e of the "E.a BAR Juh AI( P'd .venzgulrfl .:nd Mild: sad ds o o N:;;eclrulu mvn: o & recidence. Cemetery. .'r:zlfifbhfir rfllmu "':7 A JAnn lovm-ll:: ""‘ o m::.":wa..,.mm.%:g: "1.'?, 'h"a'm to n“.vunnn vurc) 1l be taid ot ¢ Interment at Mount l'!« atives and memu lnvn«i to nlm" BIFIELD. AN memibrs of seph ne ‘Sodaliiy ne i lity Tequssted u ml 5 1 Jet et Tacite the Rosery. Piease ‘sttend ihe nn- of requiem. BRADLEY, MARY BLAKE. W, August 5. 1931, at Newso Ay p.nfif’"';_f"”"‘" daushter of the late Dr. r‘v-.u- -t ke. Gemeters chavel on BIYMN. MARG. AR L B e | = fi g, e %.;, A sons, 1754 Pe, lvl. nw. J Iater. CUNNINGHAM, !Aoan. (-2} sfiv A wife of the lat %flo rd_Cunni m. Re- mains _resting 'y fo. neral parlors, be held from the abo Monday. August 10, s Mutihew's Church at § A Piierment Mownt- Ollvet Gemetery. Rej - tives and friends invited. DARLEY. ELIZ Cemetery. Alexandria, vn nlé YOUNG. AMELIA. AT T at” mn 6% a_ 3. Svarseva, man, Mr.' Joseph Daniel an¢ nml De Young.” Notice of D o, fock p.m, Relative Trieiment Onkioh, mn, ?‘Afi )‘:!h d o 'n-’tl . on snuruv. Wednesday. A-rut ngar Dghestown, in his Tist year, Cartes ing resting @ homc Sf, William Reyben iben Pu Funeral Saturdvy. bv,lo"d Tomorrow—Sun rises 5:14 am.; sun | WA sets 7:13 p.m. Moon rises 11:34 a.m.; sets 2:02 pm. eight months it the average are shown in the foll wl.n; table: EEszacks FEEERERE b . Saturday, August 8. nnon. WILLIA! rted pesday. August £ 1961, ab residence. BENBON. eloved huskan Henson. ' He I ves 8l . take thy rest: T T.fv’pé‘“yo‘n"?nm Laew d HINES, MAY. On Priday, Aurast T 1901, at her residence. .ml A6tk i, nox Miss MAY 00 o A otice. of ‘funerai N“IIDA'V;GHIUADIEB'I! Doparied this life on ueust 3, 1681, <ILDRED '8. JORDAN, ] Jordan, ot ‘Pairmont eights mourn thei Toesa Bussand. fonr children, & other relatives and friends. ns Hamera) home. 2065 Goorsis s Tuner AT ‘friends invited. ches. gust, 1928, 14.41 inches. ‘Weather in Various Cities. AWp10181% WIBH P33T M e R Bln‘n(lllhlm Bismarck, N. 34 255 aha, Nel Philadeipnia Phoenix. Ari Pittsburih, Bortiand, Mo Pertiand, { |07, @ oy Ry Lol "','““"'k‘.s fion il Louiss Pspunq of Mars “'.v .'v'ou' ufin % 'l'l ‘ o 1302 8 8 5 be vi II'OI l Delock Pm. &t shove adaress "? 7, A L) meral pam. terment. %uu:r 'm “ot 5 'R s --. ‘ ineral lnd frignds hu 'Y J. WI LLIAM [ LEE'S %NSZ CR FEMA E%RIU& 333 PA, AVE. N CLEHENTS 1048 wise Aver 'vmm nnkGdu’:fia_ . T N N one National 2473 T LESLIE ANNA. Test on Wednesday. T 8t Der restdgnce, 13 NNA LEE, devol ativ an Aul\lst & at 2 dence. Rehllve! lnd fries LEE, LESLIE. clety: You funeral of Ak 81031 at b o flo Tesidence, 1326 Rigas st. LEE. Saturday. Trom her Iate LEVY. AARON. LEVY. belovéd s ot Levy ‘of Tallahasace, Fia the residence of his son, Washington, D. C.. about 11 o'clock. LIVINGSTON, DENNIS. Suddenly, on day, August 6. 1931 1 m’ of Wesley and Baran & ne. He ais S823882322838! 32 20 Fre c.nudy ime, today.) ‘Temperature. Weather. 58 i reoswich unsg. tody Arores. .. 16 | CPart cloudy ent nhunmonn uda Clear Glear Part cloudy Cloudy Park to Get 10,000:Salmon. ‘Ten thousand live:y landlocked sal- mon ar traveling in luxury from Maine to Glacier National Park to become residents of St. Marys Lake, adding to the 2,000,000 game fish put in the park { this year. GAT. wwall vilie Tt ‘Ill m. 4th st ml'. “: it E fi.“- LOVELESS, ANNE E. On Wednesdar, Au- gust 5. 1881 ‘et Ber Oecigonce. Berwr: Md. ANNE E. beloved wife af the late J. Loveless. sr. 'Funeral {rom above resi- Gence o Batuiday, AGgUSE B to, Boiy Re- deemer Churcl) Berwsm, Ml.. ‘mass i be CGala, Rt 10 s interment. at Ammendale, Md. kS Cemetery. AGNES. On Thursiay, Au\m w‘ug Rowert ‘where T Sa1h for "ine. remoke ot her soul. I nm- tives and friends invited. 3 M. Suddenty, on hurs: MILLER uun‘ = a s 'th st. ne., M1 Services at ‘x'z" '1";2"#—5" dence. Sstirdsy e 1a A Husust & at 2:90 Dm. Interment Cedar n' ux.m'lorl o ?‘m Jou e i 'm. H. F alCln mer hn::llum LINGOCS B00%. GEO. W, WISE . CO. =Y. L. SPEARm Hllfll.l 'ht mnfi‘ll‘ JOHN | fi‘."v'“\’ilgm co. —_ FUNERAL ioved | CHACONAS -F

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