Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WOMEN WILL MAP | PARTY'S PROGRAM Convention Will Be Held Here From December 5 to 7 by National Group. A legislative program for the next| two years will be drafted at a conven- tion of the National Woman's Party at the Mayflower Hotel, December 5 to 7 Important reports will be made by State chairmen on the progress of equal rights drives conducted since the last biennial session. Miss Maud Younger of California, congressional chairman, will wll of efforis to prevent women from being legislated out of pay jobs during the depression and of demands for pas- sage of an equal rights amendment. Will Report on Work Here. Muna Lee of Porto Rico, director of | national activities, will give an account of activities radiating from the Wash- ington headquarters. Josephine Casey, field worker with long experience in fac- tory enterprises, will report on the wage-earning woman's demand for equal industrial rights. Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, national chairman, will make the opening talk. A reception for visiting delegates will be given at the Alva Belmont House De- cember 5 by the District branch, of which Mrs. Paul Myron Linebarger is chairman Speakers Are Schedule. | Dr. James Brown Scott, president of the American Institute of International | Law, will speak December 6 on “What International Jurists Have Done for Equal Rights During 1931.” Other speakers on that occasion will include John L. Cable of Ohio on “Our New Nationality Law”; Miss Gail Laughlin, | former member of the Maine Legisla- ture, on “Why We Must Appeal the | Welosky Case to the United States Su- | preme Court,” and Dona Juanita Molina de Fromen, representative of Nicaragua on the Inter-American Commission of ‘Women, on “What Women of the Two Americas Demand of the Seventh Pan- American Conference at Montevideo Next Year.” Alice Paul, chairman of the party’s Committee on International Action, will tell of the advancements made in a drive to obtain an equal world code of nationality. Officers will be elected December 7. RATES TO AID JOBLESS LONG BEACH, Calif,, November 17 (#)—To help provide employment for permanent residents out of work, the city of Long Beach will increase gas and water rates this week sufficiently to provide $50,000 monthly. The higher rates will be in effect wuntil the unemployment emergency has E . Both utilities are owned y the municipality and the increases will amount to about 5 cents a day for the average family. The money will be expended in improving the gas and systems. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Co-Eds Enlisted in Ranks of Sorority NINE PLEDGED TO DELTA ZETA AT GEORGE WASHINGTON U. Front row, left to right: Kathryn Murphy, Carolyn Backer, Eleanor Chaney (pledge captain), Elizabeth Martin and Frances MacMaugh. Back row, left to right: Loulse Shoemaker, Betty Brown, Helen Lyon and Janet Stulz. —Star Staff Photo. \TWO MEN ARE KILLED IN BROOKLYN CAFE| Quartet Enters Restaurant With ‘Weapons Drawn—One at Table Escapes. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 17.—Two minutes packed with tragedy left the little court open kitchen in Brooklyn | — thick with the smoke of guns early today—and two men dead on the floor. A motor car drove up in front. Four men got out. They entered the restaurant with pistols in their hands and walked quickly toward a table where sat three men. ‘The guns blazed in unison. The killers backed out the door, covering their retreat with their smoking weapons, got into their car and were oWV~ Our customers—old, new, and future— are now going to have the most unusual service a laundry can give; every gar- ment they send us will be washed in nothing but pure Ivory Soap suds! You yourself know how pure and gentle Ivory is . .. how safely it cleanses every- thing—a baby’s delicate skin or a fragile silken garment . . . how it protects colors and lengthens the Now we are going life of fabrics. to give you all those Ivory benefits—without a cent of extra cost to you. No other*soap will touch a single thread of your laundry. lost in the darkness before pursuit could start The two who were slain were Guglielmo Guica, 28, known as & gang- ster and recently acquitted of a homi- cide charge, and Beneditto Ruggiero, 27, concerning whom police said they had no record ‘The third man at the table, who apparently saw the killers as they were entering, dropped under the table and crawled out a kitchen door. None of the restaurant workers knew him. ‘The only theory the police could suggest, following their first study of the crime, was that Cuica had been killed by friends of Joseph Marino, for whose murder last September Guica NORTH 1742 UPHOLSTERING GET OUR ESTIMATES. SEGAL BROS. 1232 14th ST. “We Live Our Prof was tried and acquitted. Ruggiero is beligved to have been & friend of Guica’s whose misfortune it was to pay for his friendship with his life. Mammon is a Syriac word used once in the New Testament as & personifica- tion of riches and worldliness. STAMPS FREE WITH ALL PERSONAL Christmas Cards Make your selection from eur many beautiful samples and free postage stamp with every ordered. COHEN’S, Inc. 1231 G St. N.W. We wash ALL your clothes with IVORY SOAP at no extra cost to you To Guard Colors and Prolong the Life of Your Clothes We have adopted “Ivory-washing” to make your clothes look better and last longer. Back they come to you—the white cloihes whiter, the colored clothes brighter — everything with a fresh, clover;sweet fragrance that says “clean.” We have always done fine work—we have well deserved your patronage. Now we have achieved the last word in quality service—with Ivory Soap and water softer than rain, for every article we wash. Don’t you fegl that it will be a real econ« omy to let us “Ivory-wash” your clothes? A telephone call—West 1020—will bring our driver to your door promptly. Double Quick 48-Hour Delivery Service WASHINGTON LAUNDRY West 1020 “An Ivory Laundry” ‘Wc have a type of service for every household need._. d-inished, semi-finished, custom-service, wet wash, 27th and K Sts.N. W, We can give you additional information about 8ervices over the telephone. Call WEST ‘020. TUESDAY, NOV NEW TRFFCRULE ASKE BY CTZENS Lincoln Park Group Seeks Remedy for “Unsatisfac- tory” Conditions. Adoption of a resolution requesting | various changes to govern traffic around Lincoln Park, featured a meeting of tha | Lincoln Park Citizens' Assoclation In | the Bryan School last night. | Declaring the present traffic condi- tions around the park are “‘unsatisfac- tory,” the resolution urged that “all| streets abutting Lincoln Park on the | east, west, north and south be restricted | to one-way trafic moving _counter clock-wise.” It urged that Eleventh | street be made a one-way street for | southbound traffic from the park and | Thirteenth street one-way for north- | bound. Ask Thirteenth Sign Removals. 1t asked the removal of stop signs on Thirteenth street, both on the west side at the intersection of the northwest corner of the park and on the southeast side of the park; removal of stop signs on Massachusetts avenue at Eleventh, on East Capitol at Eleventh and on North Carolina avenue at Fleventh and at,_several other points in the section. It asked that stop signs be placed on Eleventh street at the northwest corner of the intersection with Massachusetts avenue and on Eleventh sircet at the southeast corner of the intersection with East Capitol street. The association adopted a resolution urging that provision be made in the | Cramton bill for the establishment of | adequate playground facilities in the | section. The resolution pointed out the playground near Union Station was | eliminated shrough the development of the plaza. Resolutions als> were adopt- ed asking improvements to small sec- tions of sidewalks in the section cov- ered by the association. William A. Carlin, secretary of the association, was authorized to request police to stop loafing and consequent rowdylsm on street corners in the sec- tion covered by the association. This N KMBER 17, 1931. A Phi Beta Kappa REPRESENTATIVE'S SON ELECTED AT YALE. JOHN QUILLIN TILSON, JR., Son of Representative John Q. Tilson | r— of New Haven, Conn., of the class of ’33, who has been elected a member of the Phi Beta Kappa at Yale University. —Wide World Photo. action was precipitated by a hospital interne being attacked by a group on a corner a short while ago. Miss Mary E. Yount and W. E. Norris were elected new members of the asso- clation, J. L. Gammell, president, pre- | sided. ARTIST DIES SUDDENLY LAGUNA BEACH, Calif, November 17 (®).—Joseph Kleitsch, about 45, in- ternationally known portrait and land- scape painter, member of the art col- only here for 14 years, died at the wheel of his parked automobile in Santa Ana yesterday. He formerly lived in Chicago. Kleitsch had driven with Mrs. Kleitsch to Santa Ana to pay taxes. While she was in the court house he died, presumably of a heart attack. CANADIAN RAIL WAGE PARLEY SET TODAY Board of Conciliation to Sit on Company’s Cut Proposal and Workers' Rejection. By the Associated Press. MONTREAL, November Board of Conciliation to inquire into proposals for reduction of 10 per cent in the wages of workers on Canada's two principal railways will begin its deliberations today. The conference affects the incomes of about 40,000 employes of the Cana- dian Pacific and Canadian National systems. The men have rejected the proposals, J. M. MacDonnell will preside and his colleagues are Prof. J. C. Hemmon of McGill University, for the workers, and Isaac Pitblado of Winnipeg, for the | companies. The session today will be behind closed doors, the chairman said. “I do not know when our first public meeting will be held.” ‘To demonstrate the suitability of horses for both pleasure and profit a long procession uf equines, from diminu- tive ponies to powerful draught animals, was held in Sydney, New South Wales, | Put a part of your | income to work for | you through invest- ment in our 6% | Mortgages. The prin- | cipal Is amply secured —and the return is definite and contin- uous. May be purchased | in amounts $250 up. B. F. SAUL CO. | National 2100 925 15tn st. NW. 1219 G Street SELLING OUT ENTIRE STOCK At Unheard-of Prices—LOSS or COST Forgotten Everything Must Go— Women’s and Misses’ New Winter COATS =~ DRESSES SUITS HOSE = GOWNS = HATS -~ SHOES GLOVES = LINGERIE = BAGS JEWELRY—and New Christmas Gift Merchandise Just Received Entire contents of this 4.story build- ing and basement must be sold. All Sales for Cash Only All Sales Final ARKS 17—The | EXPERT HEATING ROOFING? SERVICE Phone us for instant service. We will put your heating plant and roof in perfect working order. Full Line of Coal Ranges and Heating Stoves Parking in Rear for Customers . S. JENKS & SON ¥ 723 7th St. N.W., NAt. 2092 Washington's_Oldest Hardware and Stcve Store NO ‘TIP’ 80 a Better Dinner at Lotos Lantern Actually Costs Less Southern 733 17th St. N.W, Sale Starts WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18 Come Early Wednesday—FREE to the First 50 Customers A Beautiful Pair of Bedroom Slippers Will Be Given FREE to the First 50 Women to Enter Our Door Wednesday Morning! Space Permits Listing Only a Few of the Startling Values Smart New Dresses. . Newest Felt Hats. . Summer Dresses. . Winter Coats. . MUNSINGWEAR For Women Flnest quality rayon Stepin Chemise—Pantie Chemise, Bandeau top, Low_back — Adjustabl Bandeau top Chemise— Shadow - proof princess slips, Bloomers, Vests— Lounging Robes—Regu. lar and Extra Sizes. ANl Colors— 39- .50 .25 ENTIRE STOCK BETTER Coats, Dresses FUR COATS At Close-Out Prices Women’s Shoes................. Brocaded Bandeaux.......... . Full-Fashioned Silk Hose Fur Trimmed Coats. .. A.C. ver + - $1.00 .19 . .58 .14.75 TOY ELECTRIC TRAINS Complete with Sta- tion, Transformer, Track, Locomotive and Coach. $7.00 For Current. Ready to Run.