Evening Star Newspaper, November 11, 1931, Page 40

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

D. C., WEDNESDAY. SEAFOOD, OYSTERS, CLAMS | LNEY . 719 13th, Strayer College Bidg. ' Luncheon, 35¢, 50c; Dinner, 50c Wholesome food prepared by best of woman Coks nder e Vrained dletibian: Closed_Sunday: —buys a complete Sun- shine, Ultra Violet or Infra Red Lamp all ready for use. Gibson’s 915 G St. N.W. \M';\,-:ANW\.—V( Your Evening Dinner, $1.00 Or Midday Lunch. 50c Mrs. K's oth ared and servel y Wome Cooks.” _ Special Noon to 8. Phot USED CAMERAS Bought, Sold and Exchanged Fuller & ' Albert, Inc. £15 10th St N.W. Holmes - Specials for Thursday 25¢ 30c . Toasted Cocoanut Pie, ea...... 25¢ Delivered Direct to Y our Door Phone Your Order Now - HOLAES JOERN BAKERY % Phone NAtional 4537 ‘Butterhorn ‘Buns, doz. .. -Lady Marble The crowds quickly “ate ’em up” last Friday. So éh Friday, November 13, we're _repeating our Anniversary offer—and #+§sthere’ll be enough lobsters for everybody— Friday, November 13 SPECIALLOBSTER PLATTER 50¢ Whole Broiled Live Lobster Julienne Potatoes Bread and Butter Olmsted Griil Famous For FineFood 1336 RAL UN BUS loy NEW YORK.....$7.00 ROUND TRIF ATLANTIC CITY.. 6.00 ROUND TRIP cee..13.00 BOSTON .. ROUND TRIP PITTSBURGH ...10.50 ROUND TRIF JACKSONVILLE . .20.00 PHILA, PA...... 5.25 ROUND TRIP ' STOP USING SODA! BAD FOR STOMACH JUICES Too much soda makes the stomach kaline and hinders digestion. rdy says he took soda for years for | sour stomach and gas. It did not stop | it. But the simple German remedy | Adlerika. ended tne trouble Adlerika washes out BOTH stomach noving _poison which nervousness. bad Get Adlerika today: by tomor- you feel results. Peoples Drug Advertisement, " STOMACH UPSET = Get at the real cause. That's what | nds of stomach sufferers are do- now. Instead of taking tonics, or ing to patch up a ppor digestion, are attacking the real cause of the “ ilment—clogged liver and disordered Powels. %nr. Edwards Olive Tablets help arouse * e liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are perform- ing their natural functions, people rarely suffer from indigestion and stom- ach troubles. Have you a bad taste, coated tongue, poor appetite, a lazy, don’t-care feeling, no ambition tute for calomel. Edwards Olive T: ble com) vegetal Kno by their olive colol They work without gripingy’ eramps or a Al gists. 15¢, o-":‘i-u at beld:: - Take Yelief, Eat what you like. ) | esitor of The Star. energy, trouble with un- | ested foods? Try Olive Tablets, the 60¢c. innovators, for quick shocking their own PATRON CONPLANS OFTROLEYSERVEE i Tells Traction Company Ken- sington Schedule Makes Him Late for Work. | £ Four years ago the Capital Traction 1 Co. changed the schedule on its Ken- | sington line, and H. S. Bean of Ken- | sington, Md., stopped riding because the 18:21 did not allow him enough margin l TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS. National—"“Reunion in Vienna,” 2:20 and 8:20 p.m. Belasco—" o' psody in Black," 8:30 pm. and 8:15 pm. 9:40 pm. week, at 11 a.m., 12:45, 2:35, 4:25, 6:15, 8 and 9:40 p.m. Rialto—"Leftover Ladies,” at 12, 2:10, 4, 5:55, 7:50 and 9:50 p.m. Madelon Claudet,” at 11:40 am., 2:05. at 1:13, 3:43, 6:30 and 9:08 p.m. Columbia—"Susan ~ Lenox.” week, at 11:10 am., 1:15, 3:20, 5:25 7:30 and 9:40 p. Fox—"The Yellow Ticket,” | to reach his desk in the Bureau of Standards on time. The other morning Mr. Bean, for a change, went to work | "0 ‘a Capital Traction car, and for the | nrst time in nearly two years he had' | to sign a late slip. | | _ In substance this is a complaint Mr. | |Bean filed with the Capital Traction | 1 Co. a copy of which he sent to the | | The letter also con- jtains a protest against the recent ichange in schedule on the Kensington line which sends the 8:21 away from Kensington at 8:27 Mr. Bean pointed out that there is no | automobile parking prcblem the Bu- reau of Standards, so that h's objection to using the automobile to get to work s non-existent. However, he satd: “I | rave used and would continue to use | the street car service mcre or less regu- larly if such service were convenient, bacause of the freedom from personal care and auto, and also because the street car ride affords me approximately half an hour’s raeding time which I would otherwise miss.” “In your recent placards and ‘Behind the Plow ets,” he told the | company, “you exhort the people living | yalong your line to use the street cars, {but if ‘that street car service does not | gt them where they want to be at the time they must be there, without re- quiring them to leave their homes more ! than a half an hour earlier than seems | necessary. street cars. DOCTOR IS ‘GYPPED’ | BY CLEVER GYPSIES iVi!ion of Brillian;umre Fades When Physician Finds Money Gone. we are not going to use the | A brilliant and_successful future is | in store for Dr. Rhett Stuart of 1638 Connecitcut avenue if what he was told by a Gypsy fortune teller comes truc But the physician has lost faith in the fortune teller's predictions. All be- cause he discovered he had been flim- flammed out ot $33 by the Gypsy, he told police yesterday. Dr. Stuart told detectives he was in his office Monday afternoon when two | gayly dressed Gypsy women entered. One asked for an examination | Talk turned to fortune telling. The younger of the Gypsies twirled a brace- let about a dainty wrist and slyly re- marked she would tell “the doctor’s fortune” if he would give her some Ppaper money to do it with. Dr. Stuart complied with the request, peeling a couple of bills from his roll, “I can do it better with some money from the bottom cf the roll,” the girl said. So the physician handed over sev- eral bills of larger denomination. Ob- viously pleased, the Gypsy lass began to unfold a rosy story of the doctor's future. Dr. Stuart then ushered the Gypsies into an adjoining room and listened as they told the fortuns of Mrs Stuart. Then they left. A few minutes later Dr. Stuart dis- covered all of his money had not been returned. am., 2:12, 4:27, 7:29 and 9:44 p.m. Stage shows at 1:32, 3:47, 6:49 and 9:04 pm. Earle—"Blonde Crazy,” at 11:23 a.m. 1:50, 4:36, 7:30 and 10 p.m. Tivoli 2:35, 4:25, 6:10 and 9:45 p.m. Central—"Side Show,” 11 11 pm. Ambassador-—"The Spirit of Notre Dame,” at 6:15, 8:05 and 9:55 p.m. am. production Plant Officer. Capt. John E. Langley, Corps of Engi- neers, now on duty with the Missouri National Guard at Kansas City, has been orcered to this city for duty as ‘an assistant to the officer in charge of the engineer reproduction plant at the Army War College. In his new dutics he will succeed First Lieut. William N. Leaf, Corps of Engineers, who has been assigned _to the 29th Engincers at Mitchel Field, Long Island, N. Y Capt Langley is from South Caro- lina, and was appointed to the Engineer { Corps in July, 1920, after service as a quartermaster in the Navy and as a captain of Engineers in the National Army during the World War. TRU This big demonstration Trained Staff Fitter is being held derful Akron Triple Guard Truss. Klom NATIONAL BENEFIT LIFE PLANS FILED WITH COURT Insurance Company Receiver Says $2,825,000 Must Be Raised to Meet Legal Reserve. Daniel C. Roper, receiver of the Na- tional Benefit Life Insurance Co., the largest colored organization in Amer- ica, yesterday filed a report with the District Supreme Court outlining meth- ods of reorganization of the company. To meet the required legal reserve, the recelver says, it will be necessary for the present stockholders to raise $2,825,000, exclusive of capital stock Tequirements. In the event the stock- holders do not make good the impair- ment now existing, the receiver sug- gests that the company might be trans- formed into a mutual organization The report of the receiver is sub- mitted through Attorneys W. Gwynn Gardiner, South Trimble, jr., and Minor, Catley & Drury, and states that the company has in force $60,000,000 in insurance. COMMITTEEV(:JN RAIL POOL PLAN MEETS THURSDAY Will Complete Work on Findings and Report to Executives’ Association Friday. The Advisors Committee appof by the Association of Rallwayppl‘:o;g(l':;? tives to draft a report on the surcharge pool plan offered by the Interstate Commerce Commission as an alterna- tive to the 15 per cent freight rate increase sought by the carriers will meet in New York Thursday afternoon to complete work on its findings, which Will be submitted at a meeting of the assoclation the following day. The railroads were given until De- cember 1 to present a proposal to the commission when it denied the hori- zontal rate increase and suggested in- stead that charges of from $3 to $6 per car be leviea on certain commodities to build up a fund to which those carriers needing this assistance to meet their obligations would have access. The more prosperous lines have con- ended that any advances of this nature should be in the form of loans rather than outright gifts. SAYS \;V;FE’S' PARENTS DEPRIVE HIM OF CHILD Musician in Petition Asks Custody of Daughter, 3, Whose Mother Is in Hospital. ‘The custody of his 3-year: fer, Charlotte June' Eaton, n a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed in District_Supreme Conrt Mon. day by Parley Warner Eaton, a musi- cian, residing in Takoma Park, Md. :h‘:n":l‘..? petition Eaton asserted that i e's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Her! iDodd, 1207 Kennedy street, have gec prived him since May 1 of the custody of the child, whose mother is detained I for mental observation. Eaton saii he 1and his wife had been cstranged for |some time, and she recently was ar- rested on a bad check charge. A Police | Court judge sent ner to Gatlinger Hos: | pital for cbservation. ‘Two other children of the couple have been in the custody of the father, the court was told in the application, ‘filed through Attorneys Saul G. Lichtenberg -old daugh- was asked ts are a|30d Edward G. Aaronson. It has been tne fate of many who :n their youth were looked upon as daring stariling and perhaps eneration, to live to hear lhems:.l\'u led old-fashioned. OU’VE seen men li builds”. But the point is t of an ordinary glassful ina All druggists have Pluto —20c and 45c. WHEN NAT ) at at Gayety—"Step Lively Girls,” at 2:15 | Metropolitan—"Mad Genius,” second Palace—Helen Hayes in “The Sin of 4:45, 7:15 and 9:45 p.m. Stage shows second | | at 11:57 Stage shows at 12:58, 3:44, 6:38 and 9:07 p.m. | ‘The Road to Singapore,” at to ORDERED TO \.NAR COLLEGE Capt. Langley to Aid Engineer Re- Expert direct from the Akron Truss factory, JUDGE WARNS PARKERS WHO MOVE OTHER AUTOS . ~ sl Mtorist Fgund Shoving Car to “ Make Room Fined $5 in g lice Court. R-K-O Keith's—"“Way Back Home,” | i at 11:40 a.m., 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40 and motorists who “make’ by moving other cars | was issued #8 Police Court yesterday " | when Roberf#R. Dessez, 1823 Massachu- | setts avenue Boutheast, was convicted and fined $5yfor doing this. Policeman H. O. Tutt arrested Dessez on Ninth street near D yesterday. The officer said in Traffic ‘Court he saw Dessez stop his car a little ahead of an auto which was occupying too much space, release the brake of the machinc and push it up several feet. When asked what he was doing Dessez said the parked car was taking up too much space, as under the traffic rules nnli 3 fect are supposed to separate parked cars Nevertheless, Policeman Tutt prompt- ly escorted the man to the Trafflic Bu- reau, where he deposited $10 collateral In court Dessez was told that while it might be provoking to see a car tak- ing up too much space at a curbing, it was strictly against the law for an unauthorized person to tamper with the machine so parked. PRINTER’S WIDOW DIES Mrs. Nellie Louise Shechan Expires at G Street Home. A warning: parking | Mrs. lof Patrick J. Sheehan, for many years |a plate printer at the Bureau of En- graving and Printing, died last Sunday at her residence, 800 G street northeast. She is survived by her nine children, Frank, Charles, Willlam, Harry, Edwin, Mrs. Annie Connelly, Mrs. Alice Law rence, Margaret and Mildred. and two grandchildren, Edythe and Jean Law- | || No. 79 for CATARRH & SINUS TROUBLE Homoeopathic Pharmacy || 1001 st Nw. Phone NA. 1695 nee. Starting Today—Great Two-W eek DEMONSTRATION Akron Sporge Rubber Pad SSES Expert Fitting Service in charge of Mr. Tom L. Collins, Truss assisted by our own to noquaint truss wearers with the Expert Truss Fitting Service available here every day. Come and consult Mr. Collins about your rupture See the won- Private fitting rooms. Instrument an Company, Inc. 911 19th St. N.W ke this struggling to make the best of their “balloon hey don’t have to be that way! Fat men can reduce with ease and dignity the 14-day Pluto way. A quarter glass of hot water each morning and you are already on your way to a normal waistline! You will correct the crime against your appearance and, more vital still, against your very health, for your waistline is your health line. Medical exam- inations no longer will be your Waterloo! Water. Two sizes B URE 'WON'T, Nellie Louise Sheehan, widow Calendars 1932 Diaries Ready to supply you ‘whm you say m word. E. Morrison Paper Co.‘, GREATLY reduced fares ‘Take the luxurious 8.8. 1 “Alleghany ', one of the ol ‘There isaleoa Fridayship. You'll enjoy the autumn 7ownd tnp! sun and salt sir on deck. Ship steam- heated. Low round trips, to Nov.30,to0 Jacksonville §46, Miami $70. Folder. Travel Bureau, 1338 H St,, N.W., Washington. WHERE TO DINE. i Jewish Community Center 1 Dining R | W D 7o | 12 Noon to 8:30 P.M | We' Specialize in Catering 16th_and Q N. Dec. 3030 'Campbell Coffee Shoppe 503 12th St. N.W. | Wishes to Announce | Recular Dinner .. Vegetable Dinner *TANG O THE SEA” o )’ foops 7 O SEA GRILL e e, B B b b B > YSTERS RAW BAR Closed B\ 1207 E St. FAR EAST Chinese Restaurant 519 13th St. 2 Doors_Above Earle Theater o OYSTERS in Every Style STEWED »* their best HERZGG’S Nationally Famous Restaurant Open Till 9 P.M. 11th_and_Potomac River Met. 9762 il 2—Phones—Met. 6706 NOVEMBER 11, 1931 Tonight at 8:30 $1.00 to $3.00 Season REUNION i VIENNA A gay comedy by Robert E. Sherwood with ALFRED LYNN LUNT FONTANNE and a brilliant supporting cast e —————— NEXT MON. _ oMGkkow SECOND PRODUCTION OF THE THU\TII!E GUILD'S | O COLOEN pres S HUSBANDS GO e - ] CROTHERS’ SMARTEST ! NEW YORK CAST INTACT g2 82.50. 53.00 = THE SCREEN OW SEE = HIM! radio millions & ...the kindly feller whose homespun wisdom has won the love of the nation. SETH PARKER Plased by Phillips Lord. fn WAY BACK HOME With *“Ma* Parker, Liz, Cephur. Captain NOW PLAYING AND ALL WEEK CAROLINA "X S.A with MARLENE DIETRICH. —Sourd, Warner Bros.” 18th and MBASSADOR coi*Re*"8.m “SPIRIT OF NOTRE 7 33 (Perfect 624 B St. NE. RROLL. “PERSONAL Belicve It or Not BShort Conn. Ave. and McKiniey St.. D. C. ART _and_CHARLES EAST_OF BORNEO.” _ AVENUE GRAND %% %% PHILL'PS HOLMES _and SYLVIA SIONEY., “AN AMERICAN TRAG- 615 Pa. 9tk St. Bet. D and B WINNIE LIGHTNER and CHARLES BUTTrRNORTE -&0r CRABW Y ' WATCH OUT~ “"HERE COMES THE ELEPHANTI" a. Ave & Farragut St nd ROBERT AMES, W os. HOME 123 C St NE TALLULAH BANKHEAD and FRED- RIC MARCH. MY SIN.” ROSCOE __ATES COMEDY. Warner Bros. SAVOY CHARLES FARRFLL a ___CAYROR. "MER®ELY X Wari Bro ner TI"OLI 1ith & Pa R4 N.W. WIL M POWELL and RIS $on. "ORCAD 15 SPNGA ANDY CLYDE COMEDY. i Ave. & Quebes 1. N.W. Pl LMES VIA S i HQLMES and SYL: JESSE THEATER 4i.* ¥e™ 11th & Col ® [ERICAN TRAG- - Photopho: ew. News Reel VI SYIVAN AR St “CONFESSIONS OF A CO-ED.’ Big DIIMR 343 Wis ¥ DUMBARTON 5 Pipe oL s and 8YLVIA SIDNEY in “AN AMERI- CAN TRAGEDY." 1119 H St Li 2600 PRINCESS ne. NORMA SHEARER in “A FREE SOUL” CO. ST B e BRRoE b PARDON_US.” _Added _Attractions. ] o TAKOMA vl Frow JUNIOR DURKIN and JACKIE COOGAN “Huckleberryilfing" ASHTON CLARENDON, AH BANKHEAD and FRAIERARCRA R R Y SerfenuRsnE s = ~ _ DIRECTION SIDNEY LUST western Electric Sonnd_ System MT. AIN TER. MD. CAMEOQ "Toduy Tomoriow—- JACKIE COOGAN .1n “Huckleberry Finn" - YATTSVILLE, MD. ‘oday-Tomorrow— E. L . “Transatlantic.” ® ‘Near Togay- -Dorothy Mackaill_in “RECKLESS HOUR." RICH ALEXANDRIA. Today Jack’ Holt. Ralph Graves 1 CIRCI 2105 Pa, ., Ph. W. 0053 CIRCLE &Home oF ihe ‘Miror Sereen HOL v SIDNEY P""‘l‘}frfis ORYE> 2% VA. FRED- Comedy, w in_“Dirigible. 'AMERICAN RGeSV BEE I STANTON 8% 8. e NE., Finest Sound Eal t BILLIE DOVE in “THE LADY WHO DAREDU ito %b . GAITHERSBURG, MD. SALLY RS’ and Frecdom e RY ANN- O FREE—Reducing Book! Ask your druggist for “Cutting Down the Waistline"—a new booklet showing how moderate exercise, food selection, and Pluto will help you. Or drop & post card.to the French Lick Springs Hotel Co., French Lick, Ind, and a copy will be forwarded to you at once. PLUTO" WlLL ' Mem'fi Dancing Masters of Amc’lc-M Inc. ODERN BALLROO! DANCING Fox Trot, Walts and <on's new dance Trot and Waitx, dom i vate “Lessom " Tiva ises Stualo. 1th 8L N.W. Adams 253 —Phil e _announces additional children's classes in Ing for beginners an stage Dancing, [o8 fon Tavited. - Sdvanced. 6 Dupont Circle North 8304 . STAFFORD _PEI R ;. Siase snd Ball Roas: Ouns Phone North siyies, 8 Sluale. Tize Conn." Ave. 1 Announcement demand_additional be . 187 Sames e Riday, 7" pesinners’ tap ‘Booklet % Phil Hi Request, ayden 6 Dupont Cirele > Due, class Com- & SHUBERT BELASCO ‘X'aas Nire FRANK MORSE PINCH-HITTING - CRITIC OF THE POST SAYS: p3ody in Black” should pack p n Orehestra 1.50. 82 -Mat. Sat. the this The Times says: “This production s a werk of it well worth seeing more “It is moteworthy, intensely in teresting, wildly, magnificently en- foyable.” Go see tha t's different, -—AND I SAY— It is the best real musical treat I ever offered. Glorious, glamorous, gripping. How richly has God endowed these unpre- tentious people! L. Stoddard Taylo: ETHEL WATERS New “RHAPSODY in BLACK” IN LEW LESLIE'S MUSICAL SMASH SHUBERT BELASCO NEXT SUNDAY NIGHT ‘“he WORLD'S GREATEST ENTERTAINER. AL NEW SONGS NEW STORIES <j;0° Nights, 50c to $3.50 Sat. Mat., 50c to $2.50 an LTER BYROD MARJORIE RAMBEAU THEATRE s il St e o 02 =0 RUL i\ VOIC Jiw. Vitaphone Sensation wah LORETTA YOUNG DORIS KENYON ‘WALTER HOUSTON Alse SELECTED SHORTS peys” st 25 yMOR i/ sARRT LAST 3 DAYS Sereen’s Most Talked-About Star ‘Publ 4 IN PERSON Also on the Screcn in “BLONDE CRAZY” wits JOAN BLONDELL 3—OTHE] Inel: STARTING SATURDAY Anniversary Wi TEIGATS And on the Screen, RUTH CHATTERTON In “ONCE A LADY” Ycet-RICH-QUICK O NALLINGFORD JIMMY DURANTE ERNEST TORRENCE LEILA HYAMS Just Twe More Days fo See it e FIRST SUNDAY CONCERT B NATIORAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA i OF WASHINGTON, D. C. HANS KINDLER, Conductor [ 15—4 o'Clock | | | Rapacious A GIRL— Hounded, Helpless k AND A BRILLIANT STAGE SHOW e STARTS FRIDAY The Greatest Show in Town CHARLES FARRELL IN ‘HEARTBREAK’ .iigh School Football Week §f age Show VAL & ERNIE STANTON TICKETS NOW/ ON SALE “The Singing Horsemen of th: Steppes” DON COSSAC RUSSIAN MALE US OF 36 SERGE JAROFF, uctor Constitation Hall, Sat. Eve, Nov. 21, 8:30 . Wilson-Greene's Concert Bureau, Droep’s, 1300 G St. District 6493, FIRST CHILDREN'S CONCERT by the NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF WASHINGTON. D. C. GAYETY BURLESK —eeeeeeee TWO PRECIOUS GEMS Jean “Jewell” Lee and Billie ‘Sparkling’ Diamond

Other pages from this issue: