Evening Star Newspaper, January 11, 1932, Page 7

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, JANUARY 11932 QUTLODK INFLODD AREAS BRGHTER Residents Returr*~a to Homes | as Army Man Reports & p Peopies' brus | | Loss Is Not Great. dose ‘will surprise you. Peoples Drug ' German Remedy Stops | 30-Year Constipation “Por 30 years T had and coustipation u stomach choked me. Since lerika 1 am & new woman tion is ‘thing of the past lice Burns. Most_remedies reach only lower bowel y you must take them often lerika mach a bad sto aring food from Ad onstipa- Stores.—Advertisement By the Associated Press JACKSON, Miss., January 11.—A re- port that the Mississippi Delta’s flood picture is not as gloomy as it has been painted was made public here today by Col. Williem J. Davis, chief United States Army inspector for Mississippi, after a survey for the War Department Meanwhile, waters in the flooded areas continued to recede, and refugecs trailed back to soggy farm lands and waterlégged homes. As the inland lake formed by the overflows from the Talla- hatchie River and its tributaries shrank steadily, Red Cross officials of the major cities of the area said they were ade- quately equipped to handle the exist- ing situztion Returning here from _Tallahatchie County, Col. Davis said he had made a boat and motor survey of all threat- ened towns and villages in the flooded sections Naturally in some sections conditions are more or less acute, but on the whole I found that the people of the fload section are meeting the emergency without any outside assistance.” he said “Though there are thousands of acres of land under water, I found that there was no immense property damage and no menace to life in any of the flooded areas. Rural residents have neither been ordered nor advised to evacuate the area, and are being moved out only in isolated sections where homes lay in the lowlands.” LIFE-SAVING DASH FAILS Engine Races to Nearest Station If This Fails To Knock Your Cold In a Few Hours Feel Like a New Person Almost Before You Know It ILL'S Cascara Quinineis GUARANTEED to knock a cold in a jiffy. To relieve the pain, to break up tightness. If it fails, You pay nothing. This guarantee is made to prove to those who have tried fifty ways to lose 2 cold, that the surest way is to go back to first principles and use something t you KNNOW does the work. Take two tablets now. Then follow direc- tions on box. Drink lots of water, too—that's all. You'll feel like a new person almost before you know it. Pain eased, congestion broken; your mind cleared and yourself ready to go back on the Job with a wallop. That's because Hill's is a scien- tific formula made to DO ONE THING WELL: to knock colds in a hurry—not to cure a score of different troubles. Costs only a few cents at any drug store. Get package now. Your money back if it fails. Try it—you'll be glad that you did. ~ | HILL’S Cascara Quinine | Compound With Injured Fireman. PHILADELPHIA, January 11 () — Leaving a_freight train of 27 cars be- hind, a Baltimore & Ohio engineer raced his engine a mile at top speed yesterday in a futile effort to save the life of his fireman, P. N. Hallman, the engineer, discov- ered H. Haas, the fireman, on the floor | of the cab. He unhooked his train 'and speeded to the nearest station, from 1932 suN MON Makes Important Discovery DEVELOPS METHOD OF “STEPPING UP” STUNTED BODIES. ESEARCH by Dr. Theodore T. Zuck of the Brush Foundation. Cleveland Ohio, has developed a method of “stepping up” stunted bodies to normal or near normal by the application of harmones measured out to an ac- curate X-ray guage. In exceptional cases persons have been able to gain three years' growth in nine months. Others, retarded in develop- ment five or six years, were stepped up to within two or three years of normal In the above, Dr is shown at work in his laboratory.—Wide World Photo where Haas was taken to a hospital | track while he was climbing on the An operation on his skull failed to save | tender. his_life | " Haas lived in Elsmere, Del. The train Haas, Hallman said, was injured as|was en route trom Wilmington to Jersey the train passed beneath an overhead | City FEBR TUE 2 UARY, 1 3 7 8 9 101 1415 16 17 1 21 22 23 22 N AR PRZE VCTORS ATNIAME NAED iS' J. Wittman of Wisconsin Leaves With Two of Most Coveted Trophies. | By the Associated Press, | MIAMI, Fla, January 11.—Civilian flyers carried cups and mcney prizes away from Miami today after conclu- sion of the fourth all-American air races, while service pilots groomed their planes for return to their home Air- | ports or to foreign points. | fourth day of fiylng to give late ar- | rivels opportunity for representation in | the pgize lists. | Many of the fiyers today joined in a | Florida State air tour to end in Jack- sonville, January 24. Navy pilots from the aircraft carrier Langley joined their vessel to sail for Winter fleet maneuvers | at Guantanamo Bay. Cuba, while Army | and Marine Corps aircraft prepared to | hop off for the points from which they flew here several days ago. S. J. Wittman Scores. S. J. Wittman, Oshkosh, Wis. the two most covered prizes of the air meet with him as he left for home. They were the $6,000 trophy donated by | Col. E. H. R. Green, weaithy aviation enthusiast, and the new cup donated by Glenn Curtiss, jr.. offered for the two feature races on Saturday's program R. I. Brooks, : ow York City, had the |new Preddie Lund trophy STOP DUST GERMS which cause colds, sinus trouble, caterrh, head- { ache, dry nose, coushs, throat rouble.. ‘Apsly Kondon's Jelly three times o dey to eac! nostril and you will enjoy @ heaithy head all winter. — Drug stores, 30 cents and 60 cents, @ FOR NOSE, HEAD AND THROAT B For Best Results «..use also 2 The NEW SUNOCO Motor OIL ... the only motor oil made by the Mercury Process FLOWS FREELY .. way below Zero LONG LASTING NO HARD CARBON .. . THE PREMIUM MOTOR FUEL AT REGULAR GAS PRICE . . . You save at least 3¢ per gallon | The races ended yesterday after a' carried | presented | by the City of Miami, for proficiency in aerobatics. Brooks won the cup in competition yesterday. § C. Huffman, Cincinnati, was the victsr in the Bridgeport, Conn., trophy | race yesterday, in which three planes of the same size and horsepower com- | peted. He covered the 15-mile distance at a rate of 114.414 miles an hour. planes in the race were Wacos. Wright Takes Special Trophy. John H. Wright, Utica, N. Y., won & special Mexican trophy race, averaging 146,195 miles an_hour in his mono- coupe, while Art Davis, Lansing, Mich., won the Cincinnati trophy race cver the 15-mile course, traveling 165.8 miles an hour in his Waco plane. His wife, flying a Davis plane, won the trophy donated by President and Senora Machado of Cuba for women | fiyers, whiles Miss Helen Fitz Gerald fiew a Gee Bee sportster to victory in another woman's race limited to planes | of 125 horsepower. E. J. Detner, Tarrytown, N. Y., in a Travelaire, won the sportsmen’s pilot race over 15 miles at a speed of 127.82 miles an hour. Liverpool University, Liverpool, Eng- land, is adding & “general knowledge” 45C0 Teas The | BROADCASTERS SET Couzens Resolution in Senate Hailed as Opportunity to Show Ben- efit of Private Control. The Couzens resolution calling on the Federal Radio Commission to investi- | gate the feasibility of Government own- | ership of broadcasting stations was re- tion welcoming any “fair and impar- | tial” probe of their industry. | Republican, of Michigan, awaits action by the Senate. | quiry proposed would give them an op- portunity “to demonstrate that the American plan of competitive broad- | casting in the hands of private industry is immeasurably superior to the sys- | | tems prevalent in Europe.” European | | broadcasting stations are owned or con- TO AID U. S. PROBE, sponsible for the adoption last night by | . the board of directors of the National | Association of Broadcasters of a resolu- | The resolution by Senator Couzens, | | | “The broadcasters said that the in- wx% A7 " trolled by governments and are suppert- ed by heavy taxes on receiving set own= ers, it was explained. “The board is ready and willing to place at the disposal of Congress and the Federal Radio Commission any and all records, data and information which | it has or which, through its organiza- | tion, it may be able to obtain and to this end offers its unqualified co-opera~ tion,” the board added. N By s new method being tried out in Germany an affected tooth is inclosed in a case with the decaysd portion ex- | posed and on this acid is dropped to deaden the pain and permit the almost immediate removal of the decayed part. New Auto Door Glass Installed 15 Minutes $1.50 to $2.50 Expert Mechanics GLASSER’S, Inc. 2nd and Fla, Ave. NE. Tea Week We want you to become acquainted with the excellence of our Teas. Frequent shipments from the finest Tea Gar- dens in the Orient give that freshly-picked flavor enjoyed by Tea lovers everywhere. Only because of our Producer to Consumer Plan can we sell such High Quality at these low prices. Try one of our blends this week. Plain Black or Mixed Tea 14-1b. pkg loc Fragrant Formosa, expertly blended. Orange Pekoe Tea %-1b pkg. 17¢ Skillfully blended—fragrant and delightful. Pride of K}llarney Tea %-1b. pke. 19¢ A blend of the very finest heavier bodied Teas. More cups to the pound. Reg. 25¢ Salada Garden Fresh Tea, Y Ib. pkg. 23c T‘gflw Meat Markets Offer Big Values e, Maryland Style Pot Roast - 19¢ | Boneless Stewing Beef - 18¢ ‘7Freshly Ground Beef - 19¢ Lean Boiling Beef - 10c | Meaty End Pork Chops - 17¢ Center Cut Pork Chops . 25¢ Fancy Long Cut Sauerkraut 6¢c Tender Pork Livers - 15¢ | Tender Beef Livers - 22 Small . | Smoked Skinned Whole or Half Fancy Young a Stewing Chickens . . . lb25c 4 [ Reg. 15¢ 1 Wet Pack Shrimp 2 c?ns 25c ; ’ Reg. 12c Hom-de-Lite | Mayonnaise Reg. 9¢ California Dried Lima Beans 2 s. 15¢ “ 10¢ ™ | 21c A Good Spread All flavors. ASCO Preserves 16-0z. jar 19¢. Rock Crystal Salt 4SC0 Fruit Salad Prim Choice Rice Carnation Evap. Milk 3 cans 23¢ pkg. 4c big can 27¢ pkg. Tc Princess Margarine 2 1. 25¢ Reg. 17¢ 4sco F ancy Sweet Peas 2 == 29¢ Puritan | Malt Syrup % 45 can 4SCO Coffee | The Quality Coffee Trio—Choose the One That Suits Your Taste b. 25¢ 35¢—25c¢=10c Saved The very choicest coffees blended to your taste. Victor Coffee . 17c: 3™ Brazil's best—mild and mellow Acme Coffee An entirely different blend, Ib. tin 29c Uniformly ground. flsa)-Ho'neyi Gorton's Codfish. .......2 cans Acme Marmalade. .. Evaporated Apricots. California Prunes ... Reg. 14c Delicious Calif. | Peaches | 2 big cans s L 2dbs .jar 15¢ | #5€0 Pancake Flour. .. .2 pkgs. 15¢ 25¢ | 4SC0 Buckwheat Flour. .2 pkgs. 15¢ 21c| Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour pkg. 12¢ 19c | #45CO0 Table Syrup........ 19¢ | Vermont Maid Syrup......jug 23c .can 10c big cans Reg. 15c RSO Finest | Reg. 15¢ Evaporated Peaches Peaches Peaches or Apricots 2+ 19¢ | \ | | tall cans Sliced or Unasliced % Star Soap3 ghitf RO LE, Reg. 7c | Reg. 13c Ivory Snow, Potatoes 10 ®s. 15¢ Bunch 19¢ o Soap 3 Ivory Soap 4 2 pkgs. 23c Keeps Sweet and Fresh Until Used Bread Supreme Victor Bread Pound giant 1Y;-1b. loaves 2 % 15¢ N pan loaf Let Us Do Your Baking for You Cherries Reg. 15¢ Del Monte Royal Anne tall cans 2 25¢ cakes 10c 25¢ med. cakes Farmdale Stringless Beans can 10c Campbell's Beans with Pork 3 cans 20c ASC0 Tomato Juice. ... .3 cans 20c Joan of Arc Kidney Beans can 9¢ Finest Produce — Fresh | Broccoli Cooking Apples 7 19¢ | 4 e 19c)f : N New Cabbage You can keep n'll‘/lfll your Food Budget for 1932 if you trade regularly where Quality Counts—for here it is that Your Money Goes Furthest ces Efect T Stores and These Pri Meat Markets tive in_Ou Washington Yicinity.

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