Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1931, Page 3

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YHE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24 1931 g SNOW GRPS WEST, BUT EAST IS WARW Girl Dies in Montana Blizzard | as Midwest Rivers Rise. 16 on Train Rescued. Money to Loan First Mortgage Security L. W. Groomes, 1719 Eye St. Indoors or Outdoors Which Are You Heating? | Approximately 40% of the i | the Associated Press. KANSAS CITY, November 24.— | Some high points of weather history are . in the making. A continental conflict employed. between the elements of Winter and | Thrifty people do not per- { Summer continued today mit this unnecessary waste. i figioron e ey Beotect rthisr pocket: New high November temperatures in stop heat leaks, add to liv- i”’” East, abnormal rainfail in the Mid- | ing comfortand save money dle West and snow and freezing tem- year after )'"r with { peratures in much of the West were | S |aspects of the approach of Thanksg! ing day of 1831 A Flowers bloomed at Cleveland and a | second crop of fruit was being harvest- METALWEATHERfiTRlPS The original installation will last a3 long as the building and the | ed thercabouts. Smudge pots burned in | the citrus belt of California as orchard- {ists met the hazard of freezing tem- modest cost will be saved in a short period of time. Estimates or folder on request | peratures, Telephone Metal Wu!hev Strip Co. York Ave. N.W., Wash., D. C. winter fuel bill in a home B disappears through win- dows and doors unless ad quate strip protection i Girl Dies in Blizzard. | | Mary Snow. 13-year-old Carter Coun- | |tv, Mont., student perished in a bliz- rd while riding her horse home irom | ational 4311 i | school. Children plaved under the rays { Accuul: 3 of a warm sun at the municipal beach | of Rochester, N. Y., v The Middle West sti ground. Rainfall here, the normal annual averag nitely ended the effects of a tw drought. Several rivers in Ka Oklahoma, Missouri and Towa W raised to flood stage. Colder weat was in prospect Mercury Plunges in West. From 2 to 8 inches of snow fell yes- terday in the Black Hills of South Da- Kota. Parts of Wyoming and Montana were blanketed by a fresh fall. West- ern Kansas received snow. The Texas and Oklahoma Panhandle region was| recovering from the effects of & snow- | and-sleet storm Winter was intrenched in the West Californians scampered for overcoats as ! the mercury flitted from below zero in| the mountainous sections to a few de- grees above freezing in others. It was| nine degrees below at Bucks Station, in the Feather River Canyon. The ther- mometer went to 38.8 in San Francisco, the lowest there since 1919. Sixteen on Stalled Train Rescued. In the Imperial Valley, where 40 deaths were attributed to the heat in a four-day period last Summer, freezing | temperatures arrived from 10 days to two weeks earlier than usual, damaging truck crops severely. Icicles formed along desert washes A rotary snow plow of the Denver, Rio Grande Western Railroad late yes-| terday opened the track for a train from Chama, N. Mex., stalled in a bliz- | zard on Cumbres Pass, 10,000 feet above | sea_level. at 6 pm. Sunday. The crew | of 5 men and 11 passengers were given food. Cattlemen reported heavy losses | of live stock in the great drifts of Southeastern Colorado. CREAMERY BUTTER “FIRST| T0 ESCAPE DEPRESSION” American Aksnmnrmn Head Says Production and Consumer De- mand for 1931 Set Record. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 24. — J. M Harding of Omaha, president of the American Association of Creamery But- ter Manufacturers, said yesterday that depression had ended in the creamery butter business. He said this was one of the first major industries to an- nounce a turn, and that production and consumer demand for 1931 were the largest in historw. “The first agricultural commodity to recover during the deflation of 1921 was creamery butter,” said Harding, “and now history is repeating itself. This year’s record-breaking production will reach a total of 1,600,000,000 | pounds, but creamery butter in storage is less now than in any pn’\mus year.” b north: Nov. 30 or ‘['Jvc LgMONEILL BRO: e Wor]d §|1pp]ws ]va§!‘..L7H:tLL yea FURLIG- A Turl\ov “Fixin’s” A S e Fllanl\strnln"l already 1 has_defi- | ear Now it iz easy for your children to guard themselves against colds, At the first sneeze, let them drop Mistol in their noses. ‘Mistol is perfectly harmless and an easy pleasant way to protect your child’s nose and lthront from germs that may | cause serious sickness, Keep it handy. At all drug stores. SPECIAL NOTICES. TBLE FOR ANY ofhers than myself WILL NOT BE | debts contracted by JEREMIAH SULLIVAN, 1333 Mass. ave WANTED— RETURN Lom RICH- mond. Va.. or_vicinits ROM TION. T Motor No. N-742 y o SWEET APPLE CIDER FOR giving dinner or p: P) 1277-W_for_deliver 7| Menu, Listed by Sources ‘| of Many Items, Reads Like Travelogue. By the Associated Press. That all-American _ tradition, the Thanksgiving dinner, has developed a | truly international flavor Even though the centerpiece is a strictly American bird in origin and | raising, the National Geographic So- | ciety has busied itself with maps and pinpoints to prove that the menu draws upon the far places of the earth World Supplies “the Fixin's.” This is their case, and it's a fine bill of fare Appetizers—Olives from Spain, an- chovies from France; caviar from Rus- sia, besides pickles from Michigan and | ¢laims from Maryland or New England Vegetable dishes—Mostly American 3. | virtually each State supplying some- | thing | ressing-—Cloves, Zanzibar: all spice. | West Indies, pepper. Singapore; sage + |from Oklahoma: onions from Colorado | and Texas; bread from Middle Western wheat. SWEET CI Why buy 1n th sallon. 27c; conta and up FR 202 10th 8t S HA‘VE T bONF NOW! Ge! Flood to moder and heating and do any ng work money BUDGET PAYMENTS if 1ot imbi Menu Is Travelogue. Salad—Olive ajl, Ttaly; pineapple, cherries, Sicily; peppers, Mexi- | nas, Honduras | Pumpkin pie, traditionally one of % prices, | AMerica’s most tempting and succulent Orenard on Oha A hetwent | desserts has a foreign flavor—Cinna- Chnn and Fasrian Ve CHILCOTT ARG mon ¢rom Civion, ginger from Ja- Cromar-Finished | maica, nutmeg from the Dutch East 1 Indies, OAK PLOORING Ice cream—Vanilla from Ecuador, | Mexico or Madagascar, chocolate from | Mexico, sugar from Cuba. The nut bowl | —ready to be I with utility homes. Ask 1411V St. N.W. Dec. 2700_Fs Slev. 0619, "CIDER—APPLES Large quantities of appies at I | will be filled by Brazil, France, Italy, Rumania, China, Morocco and the West 0ld | Indies, as well as the United States. samples. Coffee and cigars to wind it up, dates, 1 Ser | figs, cheese and other final tidbits come J. FRANK KELLY i 1 from a number of pla M Will Rogers APPLES SWEET CIDER‘ Says: Grimes Golden. Black Twig and York 1 les. Cide made from clean. hand-picked appies. Drive lle, Md.. 2 blocks bevond Court e out Fotomac 1d. Open “No order too ice ABOARD S. S. EMPRESS OF RUS- SIA.—Floyd Gibbons being a real newspaper man, he don't get up. He nat- ; NOV. 3 urally though t NOV: ; , that his 25 Chi- = aod West, AGENT (1 / nese were the STEEL LIFT VANS anvwherc only passengers. i e R T s Well, I got to 2 stirring _around & Sorh S5y NEED A ROOFER? and I found 225 Well_gladly call, tell you what more, making 250 in all against needed” what the cost will be Sork 15 ‘done nmeatly. thoroughly ATl akninNe So I am going promptly—at low cost, too. Call us up! to trade com- Tofhe Dstrict 0033 Company. 118 3rd St & W, NEED PRINTING? mands with him before he knows about these extra Chinese. Every- s milion-dollar thing is pretty peaceful so far, ex- ‘E’n iR cept some Chinese cojlege boys that lost on Notre Dame.@liVe got some missionaries on her roing out to make all the world and pure like us. every day unti Rockvllle Fruit Farm it s o {The National Capital Press FLA. AVE, 3rd and N NE. Linc. 6060 Brinting plant ack into the Constructing Huge Tunnel WILL BE USED TO DIVERT COLORADO RIVER. IEW showin world It {rom its tic Hoover Dam. \% complete at a cost Th of $165,000,000 the interior of one of the largest tunnels o its kind in the s one of the four tunnels that will divert the Colorado River nain channel while excavation is being carried on for the gigan- | massive dam, feet and at its base will be 1,100 feet léng, which will rise to a height of 780 Wide World Photo. PEN-RAISED TURKEYS FOUND HARDIER AND EASIER TO COOK| Penn State Experiments Promise to Take Gamble Out of Fowl Breeding by Makmg Range Methods Obsolete. BY HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE, Associated Press Science Editor STATE COLUEGE. Pa. November There are 400 new-style scientific turkeys at Pennsylvania State College, harbingers of less expensive meals and shorter hours of cooking. All of them were raised in pens, breaking the century-old American cus- tom requiring a turkey to range the | open ficlds The results of this Penn State ex- periment, made public today, promise to take the gamble out of turkey rais- 24 ing, which has caused scarcity of birds | and high prices for more than a decade. Any one with a back yard may rai%e turkeys safely by keeping ihem in a pen frem chickhood to Thanksgiving These confined turkeys cook faster than the range fowl. sylvania State turkey cooxs in about two and one-half hours. The ordinary time for this weight runs from four to fi\r hn\ rs. ‘HISTORIAN SAYS LINCOLN LETTER IS A “FORGERY" President Coml Not an- Written on European Union, Roman Writer Declares. By the Associated Press ROME, November 24. Gay, secretary of the Italo-American Society and Rome historian, Sunday described as a “forgery” a letter at- tributed to Abraham Lincoln in which he urged the unification of Italy and precicted that Rome would become the capital of a United States of Europe Himself the author of a life of Lin- coln in TItalian, Gay said: “Lincoln could not have written it. Any one who has st Lincoln would be certain of that. I have read Lincoln's correspond: ence and know that ne did not havi wledge of European affairs tten it.” ding the statement of the h torical soc of the Italian Renais. sance that Lo ~Henry Nelson THIN K OF UNITED * STATES STORAGE COMPANY 418 10th Street MEtropolitan 1843 AMAZING VALUES 4 Bed Room Model Brick 20 ft. wide by 40 ft. deep All gas convenience homes Only $9,950 Open daily until 9 P.M. other will buy Compare homes here. New Exhibit Home 1344 Sheridan St. to 1% with and you out 16th st. an, then right squares. McKeever & Goss, Inc. Agent Independent Inv, Co., Owner Exhibit House, 1346—Sold Last Week A 20-pound Penn- | d Northcliffe had offered The methods of pen raising were de- velop=d by H. C. Knandel, professor of poultry husbandry. His experiments cover several years pen turkeys have been raised and eaten. In 1890 the United States produced 10,750,090 turke put had dropped to 3,627,000 became scarce and high priced. The falling off, Prof. Knandel says, was due to parasitic diseases which the birds picked up in the open fields. So high was the mortality that many farm- ers stopped raising turkeys Ry rajsing them in pens Prof. Knan- del protected his turkeys effectively from the field discases. They cost about 2 cents more a pound to raise in confinement. but this' extra expense is more than compensated for by the ‘Turkeys larger number of turkeys that live to | market age in the pens. Confinement facilitates certain scien- tific studies. These show that the biggest and earliest eggs in the Spring produce the largest Fall turkeys. to buy Nino D'Althan. Gay said “If Northcliffe made the offer he did 15 solely to call D'Althan’s bluff and get him to produce the original. My opinion s that the letter is an absolute forgery . White Eishing for Scots. Following a_declaration of Provost | Byckie, Scotland, eannot | Merson that keep going on Lerring fishing and the city was facing a serious condition, a society to promote white fishing is being formed. The society will finance the building of motor hoats for fishermen. Milk, Cream and ot will take eight years to | the.document from its owner, AN’ TRIAL BARES GERMAN AR FORCE Rumor of Subsidies Banned by Versailles Pact Seem Confirmed by Court. BY EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER. | Bs Cable to The Star. BERLIN, Germany, November 24.— | By the treaty of Versailles, part 5, sec- mnn 3, article 198, “the armed forces f Germany must not. include any mil- |itary or naval air forces.” This obviously prohibits even subsidies given to so-called civil aviation by military or naval authorities, or for military or_naval purposes. | "That a great supposition exists that Germany has been consistently break- |ing this article of the treaty has long | been known. Now it seems to be con- firmed. The publisher of the weekly Berlin ‘wfltbuehna a pacifist, Carl Von Os-| | sietzky, was sentenced yesterday by the Supreme Court at Leipzig to 18 | months' imprisonment for an article | published in_ his magazine and written by Walter Kreiser, who received the | same sentence. |, Reveals Airline Subsidies. In this article, which the court orders lo be obliterated, the writer stated in a sarcastic tone that the German min- | istry of defense was systematically sub- | sidizing airplane companies, notably the Severa and the Albatros. The latter, it is stated, was formerly called division M. meaning military Furthermore, these companies, which virtually belong one to the Germany | navy and one to the army, own about 80 airplanes which are steadily flying, | | often “abroad,” meaning Soviet Russia After more than 30 months Herr Ossietzky snd Herr Krelser were brought before the Supreme Court, tried and condemned for treason on the basis | of & fantastic Jaw whereby the German ‘znvnmmcnb seeks to prevent Germans from protesting against its breaches of treaty obligations, Just how, these circumstances, Germany expects | to come to the Disarmament Conference and ask France to disarm is dark. Decision Considered Scandal. | Democratic circles, whose influence 15 | steadily diminishing, consider the de- \rminn a scandal. The Reichstag Presi- dent, Paul Loebe, made a protgst where- | | in he declares that Herr Kreiser only THE CHRISTMAS GIYTYSTORE FoR Avi Tus rroris | during which 900 | Sterling * Black Glnx_: CIGARETTE BOX With Your Own Individual Initial or Momogram in Sterling Silver 52 Jewelers | Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. It her Thompson Dairy Products are as important to the Thanks- itself. ing feast as the plump, brown turkey Your milkman will supply you im- mediately if note or “Extra Order Card” 7 left in empty bottle. Or, if you pre- fer, phone Decatur 1400. PASTEURIZED MILK BUTTE CHEESE COFFEE CREAM WHIPPING CREAM BUTTERMILK USE EXTRA ORDER CARD THOMPSON’'S DECATUR i4¢0 A JOO% INDEPENDENT WASHINGTOV under | BL4cCk: $6 $8.50 Stationers A Xahn Jne. | wrote somthing which could at any mo- | ment have been said in the Reichstag | without consequences. The Democratic | prus ls nppl"!d - demnation of "literary trea- ‘mn ux almed not to prevent but to protect abuse by the German military. | The sentence seems to demonstrate that | lhfl pn(-ucal influence of the German —always large from the point of | \(ew of democracy—now has become overweening. It is of interest to contrast two sen- tences. When Adolf Hitler in 1923 | | sought to overthrow the republic by | ‘(nrcfl of arms, he was sentenced to a fortress. for a few years, where he was | \!rflt!d like gentleman and speedily | | pardoned. Herr Ossietzy and Herr | Kreiser, who merely revealed the sug posed breaches of solemn treaties by the German government, are con- | demnegd to 18 months in prison among common criminals. i (Copyrizht, 1931.) DIES IN OLD HOME 7 B SWabster ERplree M bR Where Father Composed Hymns. ELKHORN, Wis, November 24 (%) — Joseph Hayden Webster, 76, died here yesterday in the house in which he was | born. "In the same house his father, Joseph P. Webster, composed “In the | Sweet Bye and Bye” and other hymns and ballads. Even when Webster was ‘bm—n the house was an old structure, its age being estimated at about a century. Most people do not realize the fre- quency of famine in backward countries, DELIGHTFUL % ¢ DINNER ~ 1 < Connecticut Ave. ) at Porter ’ Phone “CL. 6900” 5 COURSES Price minus Quality \ means nothing. Food \ Quality and prepara- uon by our chef means \ pleasure and health, ) | "AND OH WHAT A DIFFERENCE A GIFT THAT 1S DIFFERENT “Silver on GLA4ss Reflects Individuality Sandwich Cheese and Cracker Dishes .. Pinch Bottle Tall, wide-mouth 55.00 Vases ’5 S 3- Piere-(‘nnsmr Sets in various shapes— 1750 520 Platinumsmiths * 39 Years at 935 F St. R—EGGS INDUSTR Rinaldi Gal @mpanyInc. 649 Rhode Island Ave. N.E. Phone: North 1600 « « . CHANGE to our hard coal . .. more real heat in every ton! ORDER TODAY-! Your Thanksgiving Hostess will doubly ap- preciate your apprecia- tion if you “Say It With Flowers.” 0000000000000 OO F]owers by W;ré National 4905 1407 H N.W. 3 Doors West of 14th St. Off YOUR Mind— On OURS! Spend a few minutes telling us your heating problems— and you’ll never have to tell them to anybody again! We’ll take over the job of giving you BETTER HEAT with your present equipment—clean heat, even heat, economical heat! That's what we've been doing in Washington for nearly a hundred years— and what we can do for YOU. Call us now, be- fore you forget. William King & Son COAL MERCHANTS ESTABLISHED 1835 Main Office 1151 16th Street Georgetown 2901 K Street Phone Decatur 0273 Grandmother finds way to grow old gracefully “I don’t try to keep up the pace of the younger generation,” says this “I leave that 65-year-old woman. to my grandchildren. “But just because I lead a quiet life doesn’t mean that I'm not per- I never felt better. Everything about me is normal and functions as it should. I make sure of that by taking Nujol xegul:rlv‘ Nujol keeps me in good condition.” When people become less active, | Nujol becomes even more impor- tant for good health. For Nujol not only prevents the excess of | body poisons (we all have them) fectly well. removal. lead more or less sedentary lives. lack of exercise. It keeps the body functioning as Nature intended. Even if you think you're perfectly well, try Nujol. It was perfected by the famous Nujol Laboratories, 2 Park Avenue, New York City. see if you don’t feel better. Nujol can’t possibly upset you. It con- tains absolutely no drugs or medi- cing;. Be sure you get the gepuine. £ g % g i ! g i H i H § : i i from forming, but aids in their | All of us—old and young alike— || But Nujol helps make up for this | Take it for three months and just |

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