Evening Star Newspaper, June 30, 1932, Page 36

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NS SKIN 7 Shades in 7 Nights! "WHITE Amazing new creme | whitens skin 7 shades| in 7 nights or costs you nothing. Removes ireckles, ta ness, m pimples anc Safe...ecasy Get a jar of Fan Tan Bleach Creme today Money back if not delighted. Sold at All PEOPLES DRUG STORES | Don’t let agony of piles take the EndSufferingof PILES . E PILE - FOE. a doctor's preseription, for quick. pleasant reliel. All forms of piles success- fully relieved. & o8¢t PILE-FOE for P! One Bug Today May Be 120 Next Week LES. §1. at drusgists Kill Them All! z BUGGd'I.Il kind multiply so quickly that ordinary measures wél]ul}cz ; keep your bome free of them. : housewife knows if she Sprays : Dethel occasionally it seeks them out ° @herever they are hiding—roaches, I oants feas, mothe, flies, mos ° quitoes—and kills them. It quickly des- troys their germs and eggs 80 that your omeis absolutely bugfree and sanitary. Buy Dethel today from your favorite | @ealer under our guarantee of com, satisfaction or money back. Dethol Cos Inc., Baltimore, Md. i | | | - Eulogizes Climbing in Audi- —{ | Pope Pius in his youth was a passion- ction guaranteed. | our Father. im]m Dethol *Good reason. This de- POPE HARKS BACK | TOMOUNTANDAYS 1 ence to Alpine Society | at Vatican. By the Associated Press. VATIOAN OITY, Jume $0.--Over-| flowing with enthusiasm, Pope Pius burst into a glowing eulogy of moun- | tain climbing during an audience he| granted recently to a society of Alpin- ists known as the Young Mountain. ate folldwer of mountain climbing. | “Mounitaineérs,” he explained, “always | possess an inner youth of spirit—a play- ful, perennial, triumphant youth. This renders possible a keener enjoyment of | the heights. “You see in the mountains & reflection | of the great, unchangeable and eternal | youth of God himself. Truthtully, in| few creatures does one find the infinite, omnipotent imprint of God so Tichly engraved a8 in the mountains.” Vigarous Youth Lomg Past. With a note of sadness in his voice as he thought of his vigorous youth long past and his continued semi-imprison- ment in the mountainless Vatican City, th year-old Pontiff continued “Mountains grow old. They wear down because of atmospheric influences and the law of gravity. Summits be- come lower, Also the friends of the mountains, even those who live in the midst of tham, even the most robust untaineers grow old. “We are all approaching the house of u In some Alpine zones, if one asks an old man his age, he does not respond with the number of years but with the simple and moving phrase, | ‘only a little while how and I'm going home’.” Spiritual Force Needed. Pope Pius told his visitors that moun- tains must be climbed not only by physical but also spiritual force. “Only with spiirtual force and vision can one adequately enjoy the most beautiful part of the mountairs, their sublimity and treasures.” This recalled to the Pontiff two inei- dents. One was of an ascension he| made with a taciturn guide who spoke | summit of an Alpine peak. fell to his knees on the ioe we've simply got to pra; ‘The other incident of a difficult peak 14,000 feet “Around ft ‘were 10 other peaks 0 feet high. There I assisted st a tremendous, powerful concert of na- tute. It was a hymn and gesture of t.ruagé,suhume adoration.” . fore giving the young mountaineers his blessfig, the ;‘;ve repeated the words of the Prophet Habekkuk, who compared the mountains to immense glants ralsing their arms on high. Some years ago the Pope wrote & | world. book on mountain climbing. “It was a lively party. those late. I thought I'd feel awful this morning. But if you could only see me. Fresh as a daisy! “And hostess had a case of Lith-A-Limes THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, W. S. gRIGSBY BURIED |REICHELDERFER ASKS | Oontederate Veteran Laid to Rest BARNARD’S RETENTION | | in Aslington. | Funeral services for Winfield Seott | Grigsby, 87, Confederate veteran, who died yvesterday after a long illness, were | i If LG R held this morning at 9:30 o'elock at the | e Superintendent the reformatory at Lorton, Va.; the workhouse at Occoguan, Va..and lh! jail in the District of Columbia. * * “The teformatory at Lorton, V., be- | ing developed under the direction and = ¥ra . . . |management of Mr. Barnard, is & | Writes to Civil Service Commission unique pemal instftution. It receives all long-term prisoners of the class usually sent to State penitentiaries. The terms | of imprisonment extend from one year |to lfe. Prisoners of this type have | usually been housed in eells in build- g e b o Tt | ings located within a barred prison wall. of Fairfax County, Va., Mr. ks At Lorton the experiment is being Grigsby came to Washington more than ;.ul‘?,fi;’:‘,‘:&.?é o“{d °ga'x}n¥£ ;&T‘ifi,x | tried to afford prisoners a more nearly 40 years ago and had made his home | g4ione te the fact he attained | normal miode of life. * The safe- here contintiously. He was a member of | fho e or 70 TRSt AprH 4, was urged the United Confederate Veteran CAIP | in » letter written ta the Civil Service x | Commission yesterday by Dr. Luther Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Champe | M Reichelderfer, president of the Board 8. Fitrhugh, and two nieces, Miss | 5 District Commissiorers. Champe G. Fitzhugh and Mrs. Baward | Declaring Mr. Barnard “cannot be Ferneyhough, all of this city. Mr. |separated from the service of the Dis- Grigsby#lived at 1317 Eleventh street. | trict of Columbia without cetriment to that service,” Dr. Reichelderfer's letter The continental shelf around Japan Is |states one of the great fishing grounds of the | “For nine years Mr. Barnard has Been in chargé of the penal institutions Lee Soms Chapel, 322 Penmymnh. . Burial was in the Confederate keeping of the prisoners more | upon educational effect and the devel- opment of a higher morale than it does on physical restraint. [— English school children of today are better in physique, mentality and alert- ness, as well as being better clad and fed, than their predecessors 25 years g0, declares Sir John Gilbert, who has just resigned as chairman of the Lon- don Education Committee. ” ’ 5 Let's quit now .. Md's got something good for us” ...and Ma knows the way to a man’s heart He knows that Ma has good recipes and that she’s had enough experience to realize thata good recipe calls for perfect ingredients. Naturally, she gets BUDWEISER MALT .:.3 lbs. in the big red can—Tlight or dark: Budweiser 2 MALT ANHEUSER-BUSCH » ST One of merry ones that breaks up kling drink for lively parties and family refreshment, is on sale by all leading dealers, in 2 popular sizes. The giant bottle and the pint size. Very economical, because it keeps sparkling even when re- capped and put away for days. I know why. You see, our in the refrigerator, and that’s what all our drinks were made with.”* Lith-A-Limes, the unique spar- licious sparkling bever- agereducesacidity, chief cause of “morning-after blues.” OTHER CLOVERDALE DRINKS L LIVELY PALE ORY, LIVELY AMBER GINGER ALE AND LIVELY SARSAPARILLA WRC-9:30r.m-Every Wednesday—Radio’s zippiest rhythm. Tune in on the Lively Party Music of The Lively Lith-A-Limers. no “morning-after blues® in ITH-A-LIMES STAYS LIVELY LONGEST > of the District of Columbia, compriint | ROBS TELEPHONE BOOTH JUNE 30, 1932. {block of Tndian terday. IN POLICE HEADQUARTERS | Investigators from the tel 1| PADY were told that some p Coin Thief, Trapped W B, A& number of occasions rem Sent to Jail for 180- Day Term. | Traffic in building Bureau the public teleghone booth at police head- quarters, enue, was convicted and sent to jail for 180 days by Judge John P. MeMahon in Police Court yes- 4 nickels from a pay telephone adjacent to the headquarters A bell was rigged up on the station_clerk’s desk which would r Accused of taking nickels from a | when the coin box was tampered wit Tuesday afternoon the bell rang, and arten T. McGuinn, 37, 200 officers rushed to the telephone booth to find It occupled by MeGui was arrested for petty larceny. served 30 days about three months on the same charge. He entered & of gullty yesterday he com- had on lent to 50 cents, LET’s TALK FacTs ABOUT ELECTRIC RE THE_ ONE FACTOR that deter- mines the long life and continuous operation of any refrigerator is the mechanism. When the mechanism ofa refrigerator fails, refrigeration ceases. Service expense begins. There is no mechanism like that of the General Electric Refrigerator. Every moving part is hermetically sealed-in- steel in the Monitor Top. The General Electric’s mechanism .requires no.at- tention—not even oiling. Tt cannot fail because ‘of neglect—be- cause there is nothing for you to neg- lect. Air, dust, and moisture cannot reach the mgchamsm. Your children can’t reach it. It’s simple, clean, compact and efficient. To more than a million and a quarter homes the General Electric Refriger- ator has furnished the lowest cost re- frigeration service obtainable. $10 down will deliver a full-sized Gen- eral Electric to your home tomorrow. The balance may be paid in amounts no larger than the General Electric can actually save you. Select your model today. WARNER & G We Also Sell General Electric Ranges ALEXANDRIA, VA, 908 KING ST. PHONE 1604 2 General General Electric Home Laundry FRIGERATORS ® Monitor m sealed-in-steel fo atten- Top requir: tion—not even oiling. ® All-Steel cabinet—built like a safe to give life-time service. ® Acid and stain-r lain interior; ac ature control; ing porce- ble temper- broom-higi ® Sliding Shelves add conven- ience—bring all food into plain sight and easy reach. ® Sanitary Super-Freezer —all porcelain, inside and out; easy to clean and keep ciean. RAY Electric Radios Equipment CLARENDON, VA, 37 WILSON BLVD. PHONE CLAR. 287§ GENERAL @ ELECTRIC All-Steel Refrigerator NATIONAL ELECTRICAL SuprLy Co. RETAIL DISPLAY ROOMS 1328-1330 New York Ave. N.W. DI Phop- NAtional 6800 Police discovered that McGuinn had Bets on horse and dog races in Eng- land last year totaled $12.500,000, with a turnover of nearly $20,000000, more than 9.000.000 of the wagers being for the minimum amount, which i equivae

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