Evening Star Newspaper, January 8, 1932, Page 26

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, 1932. f; r .Y’ = NIC0 FFEF 4 v These Prices prevail in i SANICO COFFEE SANICO COFFEE GOOd Butter has been an important factor in making our stores popular Pound Sanitary Butter . . . . . . & 35c An excellent quality fresh creamery butter—long a popular favorite with our patrons. Land O’ Lakes Butter . . . & 39c America’s finest quality fresh cream butter government graded and certified. Country Pound Butter Roll Jumbo siRa 33c 2 for 65¢ Jumbo is an excellent grade of fresh creamery butter—put up in thg popular one-pound country style roll for convenience. GRAN. SUGAR, 0+ 43¢ Ben Hur Laundry Soap (seeciah) 10 cak=s 29¢ Hershey’s Cocoa (speciehy . . .1 can 2]¢ Royal Prince Corn . o3 ean 25¢ Doggie Dinner (specia) . 3 cans 25¢ "’ 95¢ PURE LARD e 29 Heart of Maine Apple Sauce . . 3 < 25¢ Phillips Delicious Beans with Pork . . < 5¢ Phillips Delicious Black-Eyed Peas . . <= 5¢ Phillips Delicious Prepared Spaghetti <=» 5¢ SANICO FLOUR =5 +x 55 Phillips Delicious Tomato Soup . . . <= 5¢ Peerless Macaroni & Spaghetti . . ¥+ 5c Blue Rose Rice . . . ... .® 5¢;4 s 19c Great Northern Beans . . . . . 4 17c KRISPY CRACKERS 15 69c Jumbo recs Fruit Cake . . “ms™ 55¢ $2.49 Sanico Femsi Fruit Cake. %o $1.95 Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour . pks. 10c Pillsbury’s Pancake Flour . . pke. 10c PE TOMATOES, 229 Carnation Evaporated Milk . . 3 & 23c Nucoa Nut Margarine . . . . . .®19c Our Famous Green Bag Coffee . . ™ 25¢ Sanitary’s Special Coffee . . . . ®» 19¢c JUICE ORANGES =~1Ic 2 s. 29¢ 2 ws. 23c 3 ms. 25¢ «aix 10c, 123¢c Broccoli punch 20¢ . .do. 15¢, 20c, 25¢ Carrots vunch 10¢ vov...10 ms 15¢ JUMBO BREAD rww5 Homemade Type Sliced Bread . . 1oaf 8¢ Seaiect Evaporated Milk . . . 3 cens 20c 15¢ Cigarettes, 2 rkes 27c . . . carton $1.29 Wisconsin Full Milk Cheese . . . ® 25¢ CHUCK ROAST = 12V4¢ Hamburg Steak w. 17¢ | Pork Roast w 17¢ Boiling Beef .b. 10c | Shoulder Veal Roast....n 2lc Beef Live .w. 21c | Fresh Hams . 17¢ |Pork Liver. ... (Special) Tomatoes Spinach Not in All Stores Tangerines Potatoes . .. Prime Rib Roast .m. 23c SLAYER EXECUTED AFTER 2 REPRIEVES {Leo Brothers Innocent of Lingle Killing, Bell Says as He Goes to Chair. CHICAGO, January 8 (P).—Frank H Bell, 31, twice reprieved in three | months, died in th> electric chair carly | today for the murder of Christ Patras, | {a restaurant owner, killed during & | hold-up on June 16, 1930, | Pifteen minutes before he was ! marched into the death chamber, he cignod a statment in which he said | ne was “perfe sure” that Leo V. | Brothers. icted slayer of Alfred IT | Lingle, Tribune reporter, was innocent lof the Lingle murder. | Foiled Jail Break. | Bell, who once frustrated a jail break |and won the friendship of officials, was | strapped into the chair at midnight. | He was pronounced dead at 12:01 a.m. | He was given two shocks of the current Two deputies half dragged him into ‘(he chair. Bell's last explanation was somewhat { confusing, authorities said. In a state- | ment made after the Patras slaying he !did not mention the Lingle slaying. | Later he told the coroner's jury that he had driven the automobile in which the killers of Lingle rode to the murder | scene and away from it. He said his companions were Richard Sullivan, ex- ecuted recently for the Patras slaying, and Joseph Traum, Indiana gangster, | now a prisoner in Leavenworth Peni- tentiary. Bell also said that Sullivan shot Pa- tras when Patras refused to pay them for driving the murder car. Story Called False. Pat Roche, Investigator for the State's atiorney, caid he carefully investigated Bell's story of the Lingle killing and | declared that it was “entirely false. | Confronted by this, Bell admitied that the Lingle angle of the Patras murder was fabricated from newspaper stories which he had read. In his final confession, he asserted | that his original story as to the Lingle case was true. He had planned, the | statement said, to appear as a witness |in a possible new trial of Brothers, but the State Supreme Court still was considering an application for such a rehearing Sullivan, just before his death, was disclosed as the son of & wealthy and respectable New Hampshire family. New York Executes Two. OSSINING, N. Y., January 8 (®).— Joseph Garicari, 27, and Alfonso Car- rato, 41, were put to death in the elec- tric chair shortly before midnight last right for‘the murder of Giovanni Volpe of New York. The double execution ileft 27 condemned men in the death house. Carolina Puts Three to Death. COLUMBIA, 8. C, January 8 (#).— | murder and one of criminal assault upon a white woman, were electrocuted at State’s Prison today. They were David King, 22, and Richard Dean, 17, | Spartanburg. executed for the murder | of Haskill Hill, Spartanburg filling sta- tion operator, and James L. Sturdevant, !'a Horry County farm TWO TEXANS DIE IN CHAIR | Farmer and Colored Man Pay Penalty | for Crimes. | HUNTSVILLE, Tex. January 8 (#) | =Ira McKee, 32, Paio Pinto’ County | farmer, and 'Alfred Jackson, 50, col- | ored, of Bexar County, both convicted of murder, were electrocuted in the State prison here early today. McKee was convicted of the murder | of W. R. Billingsley at Sparkenburg, | Tex. Billingsley, testimony showed, was |shot to death” when he attempted to prevent a robbery Jackson slew & San Antonio negress, Eliza Pinson. BICENTENNIAL PROGRAM OPENED AT BERRYVILLE Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. BERRYVILLE, Va., January 8.—The {in Clarke County was observed by a | Twelfth Night ball, held in the Berry- ! ville High School, with about 300 peo- ple_in attendance. George Washington was represented by Edward McCormick Williams and Martha Washington by Mrs. Harry F. | Byrd. Mrs. Lorenzo Lewis, whose hus- Land was & grandson of Nellie Custis, took the part of Betty Washington Lewis and Mrs. Reverdy J. Lewis that of Washington's mother, Mary Ball. Miss Nannie D. Thomas was Nellie Cus- tis, who after her marriage lived st Audley, near Berryville. Dr. C. O Dearmont of White Post represented Lord Fairfax. The majority of the dancers were in costumes of Washing- ton's day, many of them handed down through generations, and each person Tepresented some ancestor of that ps- riod. | A group of high school students danced the minuet in costume, and all I the dancers participated in the Virginia |reel, the Paul Jones and other old- | fashioned dances. Refreshments were {served by the home economics class of the high school. SMITH RITES HELD Prince Georges Woman Is Buried [ | | From Accokeek Church. Special Dispatch to The Star. ACCOKEEK, Md. January 8—Fu- | neral services’ for Mrs. James Smith | were held at St. Mary's Catholic Church | by Rev. Father Horstkamp. Burial was in_the church cemetery. Mrs. Smith died suddenly on Tuesday at her home, near Thrift Post Office, of heart disease. She is survived by her | husband. James Smith; eight children, | Mrs. Morris King, Mrs. Benjamin Walls, | Clinton, Jesse, Dorothy, Herman, Thur- man and Mely Mrs. Ignatius Windsor, and six brothers, Jesse, Neady, Claude, Herbert, Wesley and Robert. The brothers were the | pallbearers. RITES IN WARRENTON John Scott, Texas Lawyer, Buried in Virginia Town Today. | Special Dispatch to The Star. ‘WARRENTON, Va., January 8.—John | Seott, & iawyer, 70 years old, who died | in Texas, will be buried in Warrenton | Cemetery today. | “'He was the youngest son of the late | Col. John Scott of Warrenton, first cap- tain of the famous Black Horse Com- pany. His grandfather was judge of the “court here nearly a century ago, and his uncle, Robert Eden Scott, was offered a position in Lincoln’s cabinet. Mr. Scott went to Texas in early man- hood. He was never married and leaves | one sister, Mrs. John B. Minor, Rich- mond, Va. Telephone National 5000 For immediate delivery of The Star to your home every eve- ning and Sunday morning. The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, at the rate of 1!; cents per day and § cents Bunday. B — Three colcred men, two convicted of | 27, ronvicted of attacking a widow on| opening of the Bicentennial Celebration | ; her parents, Mr. and | HUSBAND CHARGES HE WED AT POINT OF GUN. MRS. LOVIE TI RIGDON. John Rigdon, f University of Georgia foot ball pl filed suit for divorce at Columbus, Ga. Wednesday, charging that Lovie Teel Rigdon (above) threatened to kill him unless he m rled her. Probate Ji R. Dud of Seale, Ala., - performed, Dece bride carried a because I did not want the gun used on me,” the judge said. adding that the girl threatened to kill not only Rigdon but the judge himself, u mony was performed imn couple called on him at he sald. —A. P, Photo Free Chest Clinic Tuesday. HYATTSVILLE, Md, January (Special) —A frez clinic for | of the chest will be conducted John E. O/Neill for the Maryland Tuberculosis Association Tu ing in t | office in ; ing here, starting at 10 o'clock. | | | Card Party Planned. OXON HILL, Md. January 8 (Spe- cial) —The Alpha Club of Oxon Hill will_give a card party tomorrow night | at St. Barnabas' Hall. | | | The Lowest Price an EASY Ever Sold for! —Imagine it! A genuine “EASY"” with beautiful French gray porcelain tub—semi-balloon rolls— new “EASY” agitator—General Electric motor —and the same guarantee as ever! $2.50 Delivers One Phone Dist. 7200—Branch 305 ’ Street and Third Floors Penn. AveEighth and O S .E.Cunningham Co. 314~316 SEVENTH SI..NW. A Coat Sale THAT HAS THE TOWN TALKING! EXQUISITE UP-TO-$49.50 FASHIONS! 20 Greatest of All Our Values! HE only questions are—do you want a coat?>—and if so, DO YOU WANT A GORGEOUS NEW CREATION AT MANY, MANY DOLLARS UNDER ACTUAL VALU HIS sale shatters every record here. Never in our memory have Coats of such distinction, such luxury, been sold at $26! Nor have we ever offered Coats of such choice, select fabrics and such superb tailoring at $26. N justice to yourself, shop this event tomorrow—and earn a large saving on a fine coat—no matter what else you have on hand! Every Fabric, Fashion, Shade, Size! And We Sale Price Our Up-t0-$59.50 Coats HESE ‘aréiithe SUPER-FINE Coats that you've DREAMED about! The values are STUPENDOUS—even at present new low-price standards! SUMP- TUOUS of fur and fabric —each Coat truly REGAL. in character!

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