Evening Star Newspaper, October 5, 1931, Page 36

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r SECONDARY ANEMIA INDOGS NOW CURED Palatable Hog Liver Extract Is Developed by Makers of Earlier Discovery. By the Associated Press. | ROCHESTER, N. Y. October 5— Secondary anemia in dogs is cured by & new and palatable extract of liver found at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. This discovery was made by the same group of scientists whosc original laboratory work helped to lead to de- velopment by others of the spectacular cures of pernicious anemir. with liver extracts. New Extract Is Palatable. ‘The secondary anemia work is of the same kind, done with animals in a pio- meering quest. Secondary anemia a common human affliction, more fre- quently found than pernicious anemia, though not as fatal. Its causes differ :ldlcl\ly from those of the pernicious The new extract was developed by G. H. Whipple, M. D., dean of the medical school; F. 8. Robschelt-Robbins and G. B. Walden. The fact that it is pala- table is important because one of the | problems in using liver for pernicious anemia has been the rebellion of the | stomach at taking the quantities needed | for relief. Made From Hog Liver, This latest extract is a light-colored powder. liver, and when finally prepared weighs but 3 per cent of the original whole liver, yet contains 65 to 75 per cent of ' the potency of whole liver. The Rochester experiments indicate that in the cure of anemia more than | one factor of diet is involved. The‘ liver extract which relieves pernicious | anemia has little effect on the second- | Griffin, mayor of Irondale, a suburb, ‘,7_' ary form. Ashes of apricots and ashes of kidneys show potency toward curing | the secondary form. Iron appears to | be one of the elements needed in sec- ondary anemia. Shock Restores Voxce An electric shock which he received BT Harvard Dean MAN, 36, TO HEAD FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. PROF. KENNETH M. MURDOCK, 26, of the Harvard University English epartment, was named dean of the faculty of arts and sciences. He suc- eeds the late Clifford Hershell Moore. —A.P. Pho!u BROTHERS DIE IN DUEL of Victims in Shooting. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., October 5 (#). —James A. Griffin, 45 years old, died in a hospital here yesterday from bullet wounds received Saturday during an affray in which his brother, John A. was fatally shot. Officers said they were told tha brothers fought a duel. e TR “Taxi” Dancers Get 6 Cents. NEW YORK, October 5 (#)—A good taxi dancer will dancé 200 times an | evening, each dance lasting a minute while working on the spark plugs of his | and netting her six cents commission, automobile has restored the voice of william King of Fredericton, New | Brunswick. | King lost his voice several years ago | as a result of disability from war serv- ice You purchase shoes, fruit and | Charles Marks, spokesman for taxi dancehall owners, has explained to the | police. “Our girls dance so much nicer than your debutantes and college girls, there just isn't any comparison,” he sald. candy. You call for cigarettes. It is obtained from fresh hog | Mayor of Birmingham Suburb One | 25 000,000 to 22,000,0 THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5 1931. ONE DEAD, FIVE HELD IN KIDNAPING CASE Schoolmate of St. Paul Business Man Among Prisoners Alleged to Have Confessed. By the Associated Press. ST. PAUL, Minn, October 5—0!!2 man was killed and five faced jury action today as a result of t.he kidnaping of Leon Gleckman; St. Paul business man and politician. ! Four of the men, Sam Cimin, An- thony Scandale, Joseph Jurley and Al- fred Talericco, were arrested yesterday after the finding of the body of Frank La Pre, who, Chief of Police Thomas Brown said, was a member of the kid- napers' band. La Pre, Chief Brown said, had been killed for fear he would “double cross” the rest of the gang. Chief Brown named Cimin as the slayer. The other man held by police is Al- bert Robbins, schoolmate and ne!ghh:s of Gleckman. Robbins some time a was convicted of violating the State blue sky law in connection with an al- leged fur farms stock selling fraud. All but Cimin and Robbins have signed _confessions, while these two, Chief Brown asserted, have made oral confessions. Robbins has steadfastly maintained he took part in the plot only as the result of intimidation. Decorated Telegrams Boom. BERLIN (#).—The decorated tele- gram is doing & boom business, despite | the recent decline in the use of the| telegraph. 1In 1929 there were 995,360 ( telegrams with embellished margins transmitted, and the number increased last year to 1,694,364, although the total number of telegrams lem dropped from HILDREN'S EYES —require careful consideration, par- ticularly at school time, Bring the children to us OPTICAL CO. x - LEESE 614 9th St. N.W. 2V4x3Y, CARL ZEISS ' Camera With F-45 Zeiss Lenses $35-00%~ Stock Win $5 Weekly Prize for Best Phote.” Prize Wianers on Displey COLUMBlA PHOTO SUPPLY 12 New York ‘Ave. NW. 175 zike this: v GO TO BUY A PAIR OF SHOES, you examine the leather, the way the shoes are made, their shape. You try them to see if they fit— if they satisfy you. Why not follow the same method in purchasing your ciga- rettes? You want cigarettes that are made from the very best to- bacco—mild, ripe, sweet. You want them made right. You want them free from harshness and bite and “pinches.” In other words, you want cigarettes that satisfy you. WHEN YOU GO TO BUY FRUIT—oranges, grapefruit, apples— you want ripe fruit, fruit that has matured before being taken from the tree; fruit that has been handled right and packed right; fruit that’s the same throughout—not green on one side and ripe on the other. Why not apply the same test in purchasing your cigarettes? Yourwant cigarettes made from tobaccos handled right by the farmer—ripened, sweetened in the sun and cured right. You want cigarettes that taste the same, day in and day out. You want them pleasing in taste—mild and satisfying. WHEN YOU BUY CANDY, you want to know, above all things, that it is pure. Is it real candy or are there a lot of other things mixed in with it? And you want it fresh. You want it freshly made and you want it so packed as to reach you just as it was when it was made. Why not apply the same test when you buy your cigarettes? You want a cigarette that’s pure; for purity counts in ciga- A @ 1931, LaoGETT & MyEas Tosacco Co. TODA!’B umsnlmnn Gayety—Burlesque, “Dixie at 2:15 and 8:15 pm. R-K-O Kelth's—‘Devotion,” at 11:40 a.m., 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40 and 9:40 pm. tan— Pive Star Pinal” at 11 sm., 12:43) 2:28, 4:13, 5:58, 7:43 and 9:28 p.m. Rialto—“Pagan Lady,” at 11: (0 am, 1:40, 3:42, 5:43, 'l«lndD“ Palace—' Dlughtcr of at 12, 2, 4:30, 7:10 lnd’” shows at 1:25, 3:50, 6:30 m.f Colllln a—*“Monk: 1:45, 3% Dragon,” .m. Stage 8:55 pm. Business,” at 5:40, 7:40 and Skyllne" lt 11:57 am., 2:18, 4:33, p.m. Stage shows lblfl.!fll 703mdfillpm Earle—“My Sin,” at 11:23 a.m,, 1:45, and 9:56 pm. Stage shows 39 6:33 and 9:04 p.m. ‘Merely Mary Ann” at 2, :08, 6:35, 8:10 nnd 9:45 pm. Central—“Transatlantic,” 11 am. to |11 pm. Ambassador—“Five Star Final,” 6:15, 8 and 9:45 p.m. at No. 80 For Neuntu HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACY 1007 H St. N.W. Phone NA. 1605 NEW YORK... ... Round Trip ATLANTIC CITY. . $6.00 Round Trip PITTSBURGH ...$10.50 Round Trip | LOS ANGELES. .. $53.50 $7.00 [MEXICANS MAY FORM Beauties,” TRAINED PEASANT ARMY Four States Request Legislation Consolidating Bands and Pre- paring for 500,000 Force. By the Associated Press. MEXICO CITY, October 5.—A trained peasant army of a possible half a mil- lion men is visualized by agrarians of four states who have requested the Senate to pass a bill allowing for mili- tary instruction of the small farmers. Armed agrarian bands exist throug h- out the country, but no attempt been made till now to consolidate them into a federal organization. The suggestion for creation of & federal reserve organization came from the agrarians of the States of San Luis, Vera cmz, Morelos and Mexlco. who MT. VERNON STEAMER Charles Macalester Upder U. 8. Government inspection Leaves ‘Seventn Sf. Wharf Daily 10 A.M. and 00 . M Round Trip, 85¢ Admission, 25¢ Gate and Lunch C -m on Steamer Mount Vernon Not Open on Sundays GIBSON'S Popular Price Drug Store Offers 2—25¢ Milk of Mag- nesia Tooth Paste for 2—50c Prophylactic Tooth Brushes for 6—25¢ After-Shav- ing Talcum for. 6—10c Cannon Wash Cloths for 2—25c Colgate's Tooth Paste for 25¢ "R Alcosel 1or 25€ GIBSON’S 919 G St. N.W. 25¢ 50c 25¢ 25¢ claim wnumwmlum If the Ioitiative, they say, s Toros of Sooton euuldbcnhed.“" ‘This would be in addition to the mmmmmdw.mm. Boats by it no oumunbermnhmnml'olma. 'l USED CAMERAS Bought, Sold and Exchanged Fuller & ' Allert, Jnr. Of us when you need Blank Books E. Mornw;l l’:pe'r Co. OYSTERS in All Styles 1207 E St. N.W. gever, The Place —where sandwich making is a they're toasted, too!). night —no cover :lnr.u. of course! 533 8th St. S.E. AMUSEMENTS. mvszmnrg i H BANKHEAD IN Paramous FRRORIO MAR Zon Stagemm BOSWE ll: SISTERS Favorites IN PERSON And_Other Acts The Dramutic Smash That Will "Never Be_Forgotten Warner Bros. - Vitaphone's STAR Ed G. Robinson 'JARIA\ MARSH B_WARNER A!.SO SELECT SHORTS ZOME EARLY I) LOEW'S E hew AYING ANNA MAY WONG W) SESSUE HAYA‘I‘(“A%VAW i THE 1931 (aFz RIOT) “9TH af CEE IRIALTO w uuns:msm e e CARIDEO . =Dhe SPIRIT of 'NOT RE DAME' rettes just as it does in candy. Then again, you want a cigarette that’s just as fresh as when it was made. Now, if you apply to cigarettes all the tests that you apply in buying shoes and fruit and candy you will purchase CHes- TERFIELD like millions of other smokers. First, because tobacco men will tell you that in Turkey, Ken- tucky, Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and Maryland, only the mildest, ripest tobacco is bought for CHESTERFIELD— tobacco cured by the sun’s pure rays, by the farmers’ slow-burn- ing ovens, and finally by great high-pressure steam drying ma- chines. In the'tobacco regions where they grow tobacco and know tobacco, CHESTERFIELD is usually theleading seller. Second, because the carefully selected CHESTERFIELD tobacco leaves are blended and cross-blended. This exclusive CHESTER- FIELD blending method is not just mixing together different tobaccos—it is mixing them in such a way as to bring out the finer qualities of each. It’s like producing a mew and beszer type of tobacco—tobacco with greater.mildncss, more smoothness, much better taste. . Third, because the cigarette paper is selected with the same care. CHESTERFIELD paper is the burest, the best that money can buy. Then the cigarettes arg made and packed by machin- ery in clean, sanitary factories. And the moisture-proof, attrac- tive package—free from heavy inks or inky odor—comes to you just as if you passed the factory in the morning and tgok your CHESTERFIELDS from the machine. Good . . . they’ve got to be good. SKYLINE win THOMAS MEIGHAN TSTAGE IN;PERSON | FAMCHON: MARCO presen RAQUEL rbonm 4 GAYETY—BURLESK. HARRY STEPPE (Himself) JERRI McCAULEY (Herself) WILSON-GREENE CONCERTS, 1931-32. Constitation Hall and National Theates ll‘l‘ll‘l’!’ GOURSE “ Bemmoml Bflp!-lw Met. Opers. Geeman Danieuse. Dee. 14, g T B Gerse Eousserl ctor. Cruree, SEEERS N8 P, g0 WILSON-GREENE EVENING COURSE, 4.3 A popular-priced series of § evening B, artis "“l':.“llu'. amous” arisis. " Course. Nov. 21. DON COSSACK RUSSIAN MALE CHORUS “smum Horsemen of |he Steppes.” n-’-;ym- chfc-n % Tirobratea 'Svanisn Piantst. Oouzse tigkets, Mrx. 1300 G st.. E»_.hufl?‘ National Symphony ORCHESTRA HANS KINDLER, Conductor CONSTITUTION HALL EIGHT SYMPHONY. CONCERTS 4:45 o’Clock EIGHT POPULAR CONCERTS N -, Dec. 1. 3 Sundars, Nov. ’ll. ':.' : Dec. 13, Jaz. l.un tickets, ’l.r $7, $5, 53 Wilson-Greene's Concert Bureru, Droop's, 1300 G St. iriet 6493 s O\, Whne ek ‘GUARANTEED. Bra .A'I’IONAI. IN GALA REVIVAL OF BARRIE'S ARL_ CARRCL VANIT £ ulcz\zs_l,muuou Original New York Rroduction ‘om; 200 “mluw’r—'m" QA OF THE MCST BEAUT! GIRLS IN THE WORL IMPROPER DUCHESS” By JAMES B. FAGAN NEXT MONDAY il Orders Now SILEERT MILLER Presents THE SEX FABLE A Comedy By EDOUARD BOURDET With MRS. PATRICK CAMPBELL IOIALII SQUIRE Helen Twelvetrees Ricardo Cortez in “Bad Company.” _ DIRECTION SIDNEY LUST. Western Electric Sound System. d. CAMEQ o Movnt; Rainter, Tomorrow. BOLES, LOIS WILSON in “8| ARCADE Tods ,"'7‘.53..’%'.".:,. anson in HIPPODROME Todasy cwtu SWANSON in “INDISCREET." RICHMOND roo2e=nfris; ¥s _ Sylvia_Sidney m e r{pav" “AURICE CH! AL!ER o DETTE BERT, - -nammmv me of OLL. mnmxc uuwn, Toe SHOHT T _ANGEL.” ANACO! SaE MARI x"un.!gh'.:tn _and_POLLY MORAN in “POLITICS.” "“‘;5" C. Ave. SE. CAROLINA ! DUst " GER: g Nith WINNIE LIGHTNER. Per- aiaes 18th ana EDWARD G ROBINSON. ““FIVET" STAR_FINAL." ' = Warner Bros.” €24 H St. NE. JANET _GAYNOR R Warner Bros.” Conn. Ave. AVALON mie s, MAURICE CHEVALIER, wmm Bvo E GRAND MAURXCE SHEVALIER, HOT oron subjes and CHARLES ERELY MARY and D. C. “SMILING 845 Pa. Are. 88, ~SMILING IT OR Sth St. Bet. D and E EDMUND LOWE DMUND LOWE and LOIS MORAN, Warner Bros.” COLONY 6> Ave. & Farrarut se. _CONSTANCE BENNETT, “BOUGHT.” Warner Bros.” 1230 C St. NE. _CONSTANCE BENNETT. "BOUGHT." " Warner Bros. SAVOY “lith & col ma. N RICHARD BARTHELM T [FLIGHT.” SR> G A e OLI 4® & Park Ra. N.w. JANST _GAYNOE and FARRELL, e AL AR LRl EVE Tt OR NOT short_subje “Warner Bros.’ YORK &~ “Ave. & Quebee St. N.W. WILL ROG!R! “YOUNG AS YOU Itl nd C Sts. N, T e GAITHERSBURG, WD, RAMON NOVARRO "SON_OF 18th JESSETHEATER 3, R.CA. X MARIE D Dnssm.sn"""lgufix MORAN _Svortlignt. S RN A SYLVAN o8 Tolinog g g e T A _Comedy. News. DUMBARTON ST EROOR A _MARJORIE RAMBEAU in m PRINCESS 1119 1 ha 8L NE. POLLY MORAN and MARIE Dm,n ~POLITICS. CARTOON BETHESDA, SECOT 3 NG, R ING, MD. 1 ALWAY& ooo - CHASE in o TSAKO oy 'i.] m'..ucnu Sts, “SWEEPST KES" Monday at _6:30. 8:05, 9:50. DANCING ATHERINE BALLE T, , Citaberin. : 215, nuemm. Ball byfin:ln( Appts. Nfl"v Al n‘.’ : -“‘mgl'n";fi‘ln 10th m q %'h""'rfl'v;: 35005 by appointment. Met. 4100, Eot. 1900, MR. STAFFORD llll N, lx-P and -.? > Dancine T Studie, ’? l’x l Cllll'l or Private in I Russian. I.C':!‘Ehtt Dh !-ll fi?ifi u a\lml h Dl’ llf daneen, ll‘lfl\ld’r.e

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