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A—10 7 vEq T REVENS DENED & PERRINS SAUCE dds appetizing appeal toany kind of \SOUuUP , THE NEW EVERSHARP DORIC THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL PEN AND PENCIL Beautiful to look at, beautiful to write with, the new Evers'urp Doric pens and pencils are truly the world’s most _cautiful writing fnstruments. Cut many-sided, like precions fewels, they flash and sparkle with a winking play of light and color. Slender and graceful, they poise fike a feather in the hand. Their colors—Cathay, Morocco, Bur- ma, Kashmir and Jet—are treas- ures of the Orient. Your Doric pen will be hand. fitted to your writing touch by your dealer, with your choice of | Eversharp’s 14 interchangeable points—one for every style of handwriting. And personalized for you, with your initials engraved on the clip. erdonal- (< Point ROUND MODELS DORIC MODELS Pens. ... 831088 @ Pens. ..$7.50 to $10 Pencils. . .$1 1o $50 Pencils. $4.50 and $5 8olid-Gold-Mounted (14K) Pen and Pencil Sets —men's §25; ladies’ $23.50 UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED FORLIFE . |251 Petitions Accumulated feiled in their efforts to obtain reviews lon their convictions for violating the | because of the death of his father-in- i law, |last three Republican administrations. | | ! Piscatorial Product Given Tests to| | with the exception that one class re- . ning expressed confidence that the fish ‘every child receiving' it. | tention te the valuz {50 to 200 per cent greater in seafoods i than in land foods. EVERSHARP, | | —Henry F. Mehre, BY SUPREME COURT on Docket During Recess of Summer Months. 4 Swinging into the docket as the new term got under way yesterday, the Su- preme Court went to work on 251 peti- tions that had accumulated during the Summer recess, denying 72 petitions for review and granting 10. Where re- views were ditallowed the decisions of the lower court will be binding. Four prohibition cases were among ! considered. The court declined :go:ee“itzl them, its action having the effect of countenancing & practice re- cently adopted by the Prohibition Bu-, Teau of confiscating personal property found in breweries where the law had been violated. Excelsior Brewing, Inc., and the Pu- laski Holding Co. protested without success against the seizure of such property. $50,000 Fees Stand. i court also gave its approval to mfhsixzm of the motor boat Evelyn Ruth for unloading intoxicating liquor at Boston. It refused the request of the owner of the boat for a review. Earl D. Bess, at Huntington, W. Va, and John Garcia, at New Orleans, both prohibition law. The court rcfused to review its re- cent decision allowing the Equitable Trust Co. of New York and others $50,000 as counsel fees in alding in the recovery of a part of the $1,100,000 which Jackson Barnett, an incompetent Creek Indian, had been permitted by Albert B. Fali, as Secretary of the In- terior, to give away. The lower Federal courts had granted counsel fees of $100,000. 1t also refused to review its decision affirming an order of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals requiring Marshall L. Mott of Muskogee, OKla, to return $15,000 he had received in the distribu- tion of Barnett's money. Labor Injunction Stands. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and other labor unions at Chicago lost in their effort to have the court review a permanent injunction prohibiting them from strik- fhg or otherwise interfering with the Western Union Telegraph Co. in the in- stallation of its service in buildings there. | In another labor case from Chicago the court granted the request of the Government to bring up additional papers in_a case which the Painters'| District_Council, No. 14, of Chicago| and other local labor unions had brought to set aside their conviction for violating the Sherman anti-trust law. The court declined to reconsider its 5-4 decisions sustaining the Indiana tax on chain stores and denying citizenship to Prof. Douglas Clyde Macintosh and Marie A. Bland, Canadians, who would not agree to bear arms in war time. sl LU-CAS]WS ATTITUDE | OF DEMOCRATIC LEADERS | | T el | Holds They Criticize, but Offer No Solution for Bad Business, in Prepared Radio Address. In a radio address prepared by Rob- ert H. Lucas, executive director of the | Republican National Committee, Demo- | ! cratic leaders were described yesterday as being content “that bad business and continued unemployment will elect a | Democratic administration.” Mr. Lucas' address was read for him | as he was unable to deliver it himself | “Leaders of the opposition criticize | but offer no helpful suggestion,” the message said. It termed the protective tariff, restricted immigration. encour- agement of business and high wages es- sential to the welfare of the country. The Washington naval treaty, the Kellogg pact renouncing war and the London naval treaty he called the “three great links in the chain that is ulti- mately to- shackle war,” forged in the | ———e BELIEVES DEAD YOUTH IS HEIR TO FORTUNE| Salesman Says Victim of Train in Eansas May Be Orphan From Philadelphia. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, October 13—T. S. Gil- lett, salesman for a shoe polish con- cern, said yesterday that he believed a youth killed by a freight train last wezk at Pratt, Kans., was Frank Leon- ard, 18, Philadelphia orphan, who ex- pected to inherit considerable wealth n{gm an aunt who lives in the Eastern city. Gillett said Leonard was en route to the Pacific Coast with another vouth and stayed here about a month, leav- ing several days ago. A letter addressed to Gillett was found in the dead youth's pocket, and Gillett, notified of the death today by a Pratt undertaker, said the youth's Cescription answered that of Leonard. Leonard, Gillett saild he understood. was the orphan of a wealthy and well known Philadelphian and until recently had lived with a wealthy aunt whose name Gillett did not know. NEW FISH FLOUR TRIED | AT HOME FOR CHILDREN Determine Dietary Value by Medical Societies. Tests ‘of a new fish flour now are | being made on children at the Episco- | nal Home for Children. Under the di- | rection of the District of Columbia ! Dental and District of Columbia Medical Eocleties, the youngsters have been divided into two groups. Children in | cach group receive the same daily diet, | ceives a regular amount of cookies con- taining the fish flour. Although he said it was yet too early to tell the results of the tests, Dr. Man- flour diet would improve the health of He called at- le proteins con- tained in fishery products, citing cod- THE , EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, From the Front Row Reviews and News of Wahington's Theaters. “The Sex Fable” Brilliantly Played. ILBERT MILLER, whose fre- quent trips to Paris in quest of transplantable theater " matter for use in “these” United States have been sometimes well rewarded and some- times not, has in the case of Edounnvi' Bourdet's comedy “The Sex Fable unearthed something which seems destined for long life. Perhaps spun out with less hilarity than was its foreign sister, this continental “fable” is yet a consistent ~ de- light (though a wordy one), due to a cast which positively glit- ters with names and faces and the super-serv- ices of super- craftsmen. - Mcommu:gA as one of the smoothest anq Mr* Patrick Campbell ablest chosen casts ever to be seen in the theater, you will find at the Belasco nct only two or three, but a good half dozen, of the most puissant performances this side of the Eifel Tower. Mrs. Patrick Campbell's brief 15 minutes’ charadings as the warm- blcoded Countess Polaki is worth more than three hcurs’ emotings by many of our first actresses, and Ronald Squire’s handsomely polished Antoine, “the Mr. Fix-it maitre d’hotel, is as quiet and clever and distinguished a bit of acting as may be_seen anywhere. While these two artists of the theater are rewarded by being “starred” in the play, there are ™ others who deserve an equal place in the brilliant firmament. Witness the almost uncanny performance by Miss Helen Haye of a Parisian lady whose marriageable troubles of her\ childeen and _thelr gold plunge her into scene after scene of “nerves”; witness Helena D'Algy smoothing out with wonderful finesse the fail- ures in her own married life; wit- ness Rafael Corio as a fiery gigolo who tries to reform and can’t; or Derek William es the much-barbered son, or Anne Teeman as the patent Nicole, or Margaret Dale, or Lora Baxter, or Anthony Ireland. All, all of them, so good—it's es hard to stop naming them as it is to begin. But ycu won't find anywhere a more capable ' lot—and they deserve a great deal of credit for an almost letter-perfect performance on their opening night. The play itself is, of course, thor- oughly continental and a trifle more leisurely than one could wish for. Yet the satire is so smooth and the handling of it so expert that, as they used to say, scarcely a dull momeni slips in. ‘The “action” (there is little of it) takes place in a Parisian apartment hotel, where a poor, but distin- guished lady figkts out the her- culean battle of marrying her children off to properly gilded wives and husbands. In this case, how- ever, Author Bourdet has reversed the usual tactics in that the sons are the pursued and the daughters the pursuers of their intended mates, and all their affairs are aided and abetted by the maitre d'hotel. ‘Through these episodes of mother- and-sons-and-daughters’ troubles pass the typical rich American girl, blonde and frankly animal, a gigolo, who makes a stab at working in the conventional manner, and various Argentinians and shop girls whose gold, or lack of gold, is the cause of the burden under which mamma staggers. In the end, the lady’s struggles are rewarded by her mani- cured son marrying the rich Ameri- can, even though she knows that he plans to leave this lady to marry the shoplady of his heart, after he has swallowed as much of her gold as_possible. No doubt a few of the many words in this will be snipped before the play reaches Broadway. Even as it stands, however, it has moments of great joy—and the only note of sur- prise came when *Mrs. Pat Campbell slipped onto the stage without be- ing recognized. One of the grand ladles of the stage, she deserves more than she got last night, in spite of half a dozen curtain calls, and so does the play in the matter of audi- ence, for only a handful of people were present to greet this handsome- ly performed play at its American christening. E. de S. MELCHER. Good Show At the Gayety. Lillian Wayne, Bea Craig, Marion Lee and Ann Valentine concluded the line of feminine talent. Harry Meyers and Joe Derita, a comedy team, with better humor and a little more snap, would rank among the best in the circuit. Al aker and Les Sponsler, both straight men, are valuable assistants to the laugh tossers. Walter Wayne, of the juveniles, with a unique mode of style in dancing, adds to the general continuity of the per- formance of the “Parisian Beauties.” C. OAKIE FACES FOUR SUITS LOS ANGELES, October 13 (#).— Damage suits against Jack Oakie, film ‘| actor, increased to four yesterday, with a total demand for $16,250, as the re- sult of a recent automobile accident. Roberta Dunlap filed suit for $10,250 last week, and yesterday Harold Pinto, Herbert Martin' and Margaret Dunlap asked $2,000 each. Oakie's automobile collided with one in which the four were riding. D. TUESDAY, CHANGE IN HUNTING SEASON IS OPPOSED Board Recommends One Month Limit on Ducks Be Retained Against Opposition. . O ‘The Advisory Board under the mi- | gratory bird treaty act has recommend- ed to Secretary Hyde that there be o | change in the one-month duck hunting | season. Suggestions that the season be changed to one 10 weeks, with hunt- ing three days a week, were made be- fore the board at a hearing last week by game officials and hunters, from Virginia, North Carolina, Maryland and New Jersey. The one-month season was instituted this Fall to preserve ducks and other wild fowl whose numbers have been te- riously depleted by continued drought in breeding areas. ‘The Advisory Board hears suggestions for changes and makes recommenda- tions to the Secretary of Agriculture. The United States surpasses all oth- er countries in the world in the rail- 'TOBER 13, 1931 $45,000 UNCUT DIAMONDS TAKEN BY HOLD-UP MEN Bandits Tie Up Two Men, Girl and Office Boy and Loot Small TUnlocked Safe. By the Assoclated Press. ] NEW YORK, October 13.—Uncut diamonds, valued at between $45,000 and $50,000, were stolen last night by two bandits who held up Morris Sude- rov, his brother Abraham, a stenogra- pher and an office boy in the Suderov brothers’ jewelry show rogm in West Forty-sixth street. ‘The stenographer, Miss Rose Rich, was tied hand and foot with fishing cord which one bandit drew from his pocket. Abraham Suderov and the of- - Subscribe Today It *costs only about 1% cents per day and 5 cents Sundays to have Washington’s best ne per delivered to you regularly 'eve.'y evening and Sunday morn- ‘elephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immedi- ately. The Route Agent will col- road track mileage over which electric operation has supplanted steam. lect at the end of each month. fice boy, Edward Arnold, 19, were also | caped from the locker about 45 minutes bound and the three placed in steel | later, untied the others and sounded lockers. the alarm. Morris Suderov was tled to & chair| The diamonds were taken from ¢ since there was no locker available small unlocked safe in which s quan- for him. ity of platinum and old gold was leff Arnold, unloosening his bounds, es- ! untouched. to our hard coal and you'll never get stuck! ORDER TODAY! Rinaldi(al (@mpanyInc. 649 Rhode Island Ave. N.E. Phone: NOrth 1600 o Matter Where You Live, This EVEN Heat Will Keep Your ~~ r PC T the Gayely this week the show shapes up fairly well. Georgia Sothern, one of the “red-head va- Tiety,” knows how to please the fickle audiénce. Numerous numbers and encores hardly seemed to satisfy the clamorous fans. Shapely figures and dancing feet whirled to the tune of snappy scores when Georgia's aristocratic cclleague, Connie St. Clair, steps into the entertainment with~ flashing_feet and a voice which “copped” the singing laurels. VAAAAAAAAAAA Call Decatur 0180 For Coal as Free From Im- purities as It Is Humanly and Mechanically Possible-to Make it. Let Our Clean Famous Reading Anthracite Be Your Guarantee of Heat- ing Satisfaction This Winter Brookland Coal Co. liver oil for its vitamin D, and pointing out that jodine, arch-foe of goitre, is | | | | COACH’S FATHER DIES !Henry F. Mehre, 70, Expires at| " PENS AND PENCILS | Heme in Huntington, Ind, ! HUNTINGTON, Ind., October 13 (#). | father of Hnl’r{' hre, foot ball coach at the Univer. sity of Georgia, died here last night after an illness of two months. He was 70 years old. 1 The widow, three daughters and two | sons survive. Funeral services will be ! held Thursday morning. N | The Georgia coach came to his father's bedside last Friday and could not be with his team when the South- erners won a 27-to-6 victory over Yale Saturday. - TORAGE LOCALSLONG DISTANCE MOVING | RATING PACKING 8 SHIPPING AGENTS ALLIED VANLINES RU G VACUUM CLEANED OR SHAMPOOED AND STORED | FUMIGATEDAND | STOREDIN MOTH PROOFROOM | 1313 YOU STREET, NW. | PHONE NORTH-3342- 4344 | *What Those Important P.C’s. 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