Evening Star Newspaper, February 23, 1932, Page 10

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S THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, “For 8afety, Dependability and Best Results”—Phone ATLANTIC 4000 Buy Good Clothes—give them Good' Care—Save Money . Jhe HOFFMAN @ COMPANY Cleaners and Dyers 1534 PA. AVE. SE. ce 58 Fiane Uptown Office, 703 12th St. N.W. RTINS Hygienie Towels and Toilet Tissues World's Oldest and Largest Manufacturer of Interfolded Products ATRIAL WILL ONVINCE Yol that the Hotel HITLER 1S FOURTH IN GERMAN RACE Decision to Seek Presidency Despitz Doubts on Eligibility. Ponselle Advises Singers D. C, TUESDAY. COLONY WORKS ON SOPRANO PLACES COLLEGE EDUCATION BEFORE MUSICAL CAREER Rosa Ponselle's advice to earnest young singers who have to choose be- tween & musical career and college is— g0 to college. “Go to college, and sing along on the side.” sald Miss Ponselle recently to a | young artist whose ambition was to Aln( at the Metropolitan. concert here on Tuesday, Miss Ponselle, | And since her | DESPITE HUNGER | | Jobless Hundred, Awaiting Relief in Arkansas, Exist on Berries and Beans. | | | FEBRU RY 23, 1933. by the fact these meals are all too small in m-y REINDEER FOR ESKIMOS mmwguous for aid. Hayden b or al Fayetteville, who sold the settlers their Stricken Northern Area. 1 10 zenhmd"wm to secure & 8T | JUNEAU, Alaskw, February 23 (P).— Cash gr credit is all that is needed to | Reindeer from Government hrrd‘ Gov make the etperiment a success, Georg e‘ George A. Parks said yesterday. will be Perrine, manager, sald, declaring, “We | distributed among the Estmcu the aren't beggars, but we need a chance | Kushokwim River district. who suffered to get started.” The men have_cleared by hand 60| acres of land and hope to have 200 acres | cleared by Spring. In the rugged territory, shoes have | been torn and worn to pieces. The community cobbler said he had been reduced to re-soling with discarded Be Distributed Free in By the Associated Press. who has been ill and is recuperating at BERLIN, February 23.—Adolf Hitler, | ' prederick -Schrelber’s Sanatarium, | National Socialist leader, was definitely | in the race for President of the German | and still has had time to hear one or Republic today against veteran Presi- two ambitious youngsters sing, has ad- dent Paul von Hindenburg, promising a | four-cornered race. Hitler's nomination was announced last night by his lieutenant, Joseph Goebbels. The announcement followed shortly after that of Theodore Duester- | berg, head of the steel-helmet organi- zation, who was announced as the Na- | tionalist candidate. The fourth candi- cate is Ernst Thaclmann. a Socalist. | United Front Fails, ‘The entry of Herr Duesterberg and ‘Herr Hitler indicated that their attempt to unite on a candidate to run against Von Hindenburg had broken down. Hit- ler's headquarters recently had denied he was seeking the presidency. The question as to whether Hitler was eligible because he was born in | Austria, met with a new reply when the newspaper Montag Morgen said last week that Minister of the Interior Die- trich Klagges of Brunswick, a National Socialist, had automatically conferred citizenship on Hitler by appointing him | professor of applied pedagogy at the | Brunswick University Question Appointment. Hitler also was appointed police com- | missfoner of a small German town "‘i 1930, and a police commissioner, as a | have a brain along with it. vised them not to make their volces | necessarily their careers. “Don't put all your apples in onz' | basket,” advises the great American soprano of the Metropolitan—*“after all | it isn't the voice alone—you have to | Person- \ and a voice, of | ality, and & brain—i I course—the voice s the most important, | but the Gther two things must be there as well.” Miss Ponselle says, too, that she 15 disappointed that she will not come to| Washington in April with :.: x:;m; 5;1)::: wggfi:veo:u g;ltna&!eo Baltimore | with the opera we should not be tblc‘ to come here as well. ton." 1 love Washing- | | By the aled Press. | HUNTSVILLE, Ark, February 23.— | Torn by dissension and anxiously watch- ing its meager funds dwindling away, 8 | | colony of 100 unemployed from 'mlsfl-} | Okla., Is sturdily continuing work of | | rubber tires from trucks. ROOSEVELT ENTERED | clearing timberland near here in prepa- | | ration for Spring planting And this in the face of the fact the | | colony has little food, no foodstuffs, no | farming implements and has nct paid for 1ts 8,000-acre tract of forest land. A new regime won control of the colony and its small funds yesterday | when a justice court ruled in their ‘fa\nr against the old officers. The colony, known as the Oklahcma- Arkansas Development Co., located last G S November near Concord Spring. | a {] | Protests against use of the com- § | munal fund for payment on the land | rather than for the more pressing need | | of food, foodstuffs and implements had | resulted in election of the new officers and the ouster of the older set. An | appeal is to be taken ROSA PONSELLE. | With their goal a self- supporting com- munity and with 1,000 TRIBUTE PAID BY ROME | Thoroughtare Dedicated in Honor | of American Patriot. ROME, February 323 (#).—George | | employed in Tulsa ‘anxiously watching BYRD POLAR SHIP SOLD |the experiment and planning to jcin Petitions Sent Heads of Nebrask: Congressional Districts. OMAHA, Nebr.,, February 23 (#).— National Committeeman Arthur F. Mul- len of Omaha last night announced he had mailed petitions bearing the name of Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York for the presidential nomina- tion to Democratic leaders in the con- gressional districts. i Mr. Mullen said the petitions would be filed with the Nebraska secretiry cf State before March 3. One hundred | signatures are needed in each district | to place Gov. Roosevelt's name on the primary ticket. KIDNAPING IS DOUBTED Letter in Alleged Victim's Pockel Bares Scheme to Win Bride. DETROIT, February 23 (#).—Th- kidnaping story told by Leo Cazaux. who said he is a chef in a New Yo CASTORIA WILL STRAIGHTEN HER OUT Of course you are particular about the medicines you give your child. You want no harmful drugs, no narcotics in a child’s medicine. _ When your child needs regulat- ing, remember this: the organs of babies and children are delicate. Little bowels must be gently urged —never forced. That’s why Castoria is used b many doctors and mothers. It specially made for children's ments. It contains nothing th: harm a child’s tender organs. r so s : ) m as soon as living quarters can be built, the colonists are going ahead with FORT PIERCE, Fla,, February 23 (4" | —The Eleanor Bolling, famous supply | ship of Admiral Richard E. Byrd dur- !hm work despite their limitedfinan- ‘ restaurant, interested Detroit police for cial resources. | a brief period yesterday afternoon, bu Optimistic hopes of earning their own | discovery in his pocket of a letter to living the first Winter through sale of | Mrs. Amelia Charles of Detroit resulted | ing his South Pole expedition, has been wood were blasted when colonists made | in the decision that the whole affair | | great losses at Christmas time through tidal waves. The reindeer will be delivered with- out charge, he said. for relief of needy Eskimos over the whole district be- tween the Kushokwim River and the mouth of the Yukon Property and food supplies were de- stroyed by the waves March 2 is Te N.‘_é/( Castoria is so mild vou can safely give it to a young infant to ease colic pains. Yet, gentle as it is, it is unfailingly effective. Larger doses keep older children well regulated. And babies and children alike love ils taste—never object to taking Castorial The next time your child has a little cold or fever, or a digestiv upset, give him the help of Castoria, the children’s rem The genuine toria the name, r, on the package. always s. H. Fl state officer, automatically becomes a | Washington’s memory was honored yes- | purchased as the flagship of the newly | trips 30 to 40 miles to towns to find no | was a hoax. OPPONTE PENNA IR STATION 5 4.0 BUSES 5TOP AT DOOR, NEAR SVBRYTHING NOR 19 STREET and, 7t AVENUI NEW YORK DRAPER[ES . L. AVIPS ... BEDDING citizen. Anti-Hitlerites contended, how- ever, Dr. Wilhelm Frick, former Nazi minister of interior of Thuringia, who made the appointment, overrode the legal rules, and that such appointments were invalid in any case if they were not followed by actual eccupancy of the post. 1 — | More than $3,000,000,000 is spent an- | nually by all the nations in the world for “national defense.” LIFETIME terday with the dedication of “Viale | Glogio Washington,” a wide tree-lined avenue christened at & simple ceremony by Prince Ludovisi Boncampagni, the Governor of Rome, and United States Ambassador Garrett. The sirect leads. from the square | outside the anclent Porta Flaminia into the Borghese Gardens, passing close to the International Institute of Agri- culture which was founded by David Lubin, an American. {LECTRIC REFRI(JFRAT()RS FURNITURE FEBRUARY SALE OF LIFETIME FURNITURE Buy Advantageously This W eek Families Who Can Buy What They Want An environment is to be cre- for a family whose taste reaches for all that is fine ated and beautiful . . whose re- sources are sufficient for every _reasonable desire Lifetime Furniture is chosen for its au- thentic and fastidious concep- tion . . . for its peerless crafts- manship . for its richne ss of wood and fabric . . . above all, for its gracious, enduring com- panionship. You Will Enjoy Visiting Our Vast Displays Parking—Drive to Rear Entrance. Your Car Will Be Parked MAYER & CO. Seventh Street LIFETIME FURNITURE Is ORE Between D and E THAN A NAME organized Fort Plerce Steamship Co. demand. They are existing on wild The ship, officlals said, left New York | berries, rabbits, bean and potato soup | Saturday and is expected to dock here | and biscuit made of ground grain. Wednesday to be placed immediately in | Beside the monotony of such plain | citrus ser | meals three times daily, the colonists | 2 | lllI\"ll“\W\IIIN'l\l!|l\i\\\Wl\fl!\\\l\\\\m\i\l\’N\N\I‘INNNll1|il\llllliN\l(l\ll\l\llN!i\fll\ll\1l!il\‘i\flNllflflll”ll\\ifll!lfllfl\\fl | | | | | | | HIS LIFE'S AN OPERA Adveniures? Leon Rothier has had the kind they write operas about. His voice has rung out in every countrythatboastsanoperahouse. One of the better bassos—a French import—and a shining light of the Metropolitan. During the war, when a private soldier, he passed his own house inretreat. .. and threw his wife a farewell note, never expecting to return. Now he hunts grizzly bears. Has smoked LUCKIES 12 years. Gave his friendly statement gratis. For which we say “Merci beaucoup, Monsieur Rothier!” The letter, volice said., told Mrs Charles, estranged wife of Leon Charles. | a European boxer, that Cazaux had Anl Moisture-Proof Celloph. been kidnaped, but would be released CHILDREN if she would accept his courtship. . K. AMERICA:- CRY CASTORIA FOR T I ‘l - “”"“Illuu.. 1 “I’m always careful in the selection of mycigarettes. I smoke none but LUCKY STRIKE. And in my school for vocal training I recommend LUCKY STRIKE to my pupils—the cigarette I know will be kind to their throats. Also I like the convenience of your Cellophane wrapper that opens so easily.” “Tt's toasted Your Throat Protection =against irritation =against cough lo s that “Toasted” Flavor Ever Fresh D — O ———————— e - TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE—60 modern minutes with the world’s finest dance orchestras and Walter Winchell, whose gossip of today becomes the news of tomorrow, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening over N.B.C. networks.

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