Evening Star Newspaper, September 27, 1932, Page 10

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All the time you have money invested in our First Mortgages it will be earning definite in- terest without change, and the principal is se- cured by mortgage on conservatively appraised improved Washington real estate.” May be purchased in amounts from $250 up. B. F. SAUL CO. National 2100 925 15th St. N.W. No More Gas - In Stomach | and Bowels || 1f you wish to be permanently re- lieved of gas in stomach and bowels, | take Baalmann's Gas Tablets, which | | are prepared especially for stomach gas and all the bad effects resulting ||| from gas pressure. | That empty. gnawing feeling at the pit of stomach will disappear; that anxious, nervous feeling with heart palpitation will vanish, and vou will again be able to take a deep breath without discomfort i That drowsy, sleepy feeling after || dinner will be replaced by 2 desire for entertainment. Bloating wil || cease. Your limbs, arms and fingers || will no longer feel cold and “go to sleep” because Baalmann's Gas Tab- || lets prevent gas from_interfering with the circulation. Get the genuine, in the vellow package, at any good drug store. Price $1.—Advertisement. Goo4ew aid in | PREVENTING colds | | The others included Judge Peyton Gor- | and dean of the Law School, reviewed NATIONAL U. OPENS B4TH FALL TERM Chief Justice Booth and Six Other Members of Faculty Speak. Problems created by acceleration in invention and discovery make the pres- ent time “most auspicious” for entry into the legal profession, Chief Justice Fenton W. Booth of the United States Court of Claims, declared at the open- ing last night of National University's sixty-fourth Fall term. Judge Booth was one of seven mem- bers of National's Law School faculty who spoke at the opening exercises. don and Judge Oscar R. Luhring, asso- ciate justices of the District of Colum- bia Supreme Court. Opportune Time for Lawyers. “In the face of the great inventions, innovations, discoveries and practices that have come jnto being in the last few years” Judge Booth declared, “I believe that you students who take up the study of law today are entering the legal profession at the most auspicious time in its history. ‘New things’ bring new problems and you can solve some of them. I don't believe there ever was a greater opportunity than the present for the lawyer to make a real name for himself.” In his introductory, Dr. Hayden | Johnson, chancellor of the university the history of legal education. Law students, he said, always have been taught by lawyers. Prior to the late 1860's, when law schols first were es- tablished here, law students were “ap- who sought a legal education read law as_he worked in a lawyer's office. The law schools, Dr. Johnson ex-| plained, were established not to change | this system, but to- elaborate on the | proven practice by making it possible for the law student to come under the instruction of a group of the best legal minds 1nstead of one. Because these lawyers who taught in schools did practice their profession in the day-| time, law schools naturally functioned at night. This policy, he said con- tinues to be that of National Univer- sity after €4 years. Hickling Course Deferred. Used at that first stuffy, sneezy jrritation—Nature’s usual ‘warning that a cold is coming on—many colds are avoided altogether. Amaz- ing relief, too, for discomforts of (VISR AN | Head Colds and Nasal Catarrh. bkl Makes Possible Vicks Plan for Better CONTROL-OF-COLDS This new aid in preventing colds and Vicks VapoRub for treating colds form the new Vicks Colds-Control Plan. Used as directed in each pack- age, Vicks Plan makes it pos- sible for you this winter to cut the number and costs of colds inyourfamilymorethan half! Cuts Costs of Colds in Half | National | would be presented in the Spring | bankruptey, and Judge Luhring pre- ‘iD. C. RED CROSS SEEKS Vicks § | | | Dr. Johnson referred to the serious | injury Sunday of Dr. Percy Hickling, | District of Columbia alienist, who is professor of medical jurisprudence at | University, announcing that | his course, scheduled for the Fall term, | Judge Gordon outlined his course in sented a brief review of his course in suretyship. Other speakers included Dr. Charles Pergler, dean of the grad- uate school; Conrad Syme, pro(esor’ of partnership, and ranking member of the law faculty: Glenn Willett, profes- sor of moot court practice, and Thomas Patterson, professor of the law of con- tracts. Classes at the university will resume sessions today. WORKERS ON CLOTHING | | Needs Volunteers to Assist in Cut-| ting, Assembling and Sewing. ‘! for Needy. | An appeal for volunteer workers to | assist in cutting, assembling and sew- | ing thousands of vards of material to | be made into clothing for the needy was sent out today by the District of | Columbia Chapter of the American Red Cross The material has just been donated ! | to the Red Cross and the clothing will | be distributed through the Council of Social Agencies. | -Volunteers are asked to report at the | chapter house, 1730 £ street, between | 9 am and 4 pm. A night class will | be formed Friday at 7 o'clock to assist in making the garments. | With the coming of Winter, demands for clothing are expected to increase | tremendously and the need for work-‘. | ers is extremely urgent, Mrs. Zella M. Johnston of the local chapter said. COME ON GREEN, WINK YOUR EYE...WATCH ME PASS THE SLUGGARDS BY ... PEP AND POWER, SNAP AND GO ... THATS WHY | USE CONOCO! THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Stars in Golf Tourney CONTENDERS FOR WOMEN'S NATIONAL TITLE. HESE four contenders for the woman's national golf title are shown rest- ing at the Salem Country Club, Peabody, Mass., scene of the tcurnament. | In the foreground is Mrs. Glenna Collett Vare. In back, left to right, are Helen Silleck, Maureen Orcutt and Mrs. Edward Stevens. —A. P. Photo. President Hpover Congratulates Ruler of Denmark on Birthday. King Christian of Denmark, who celebrated his 62d birthday anniversary yesterday, received a congratulatory message from President Hoover. The message said: “Iu_gives me pleasure on this anniversary of your majesty’s birth to convey to you my heartiest congratulations and best | wishes for your heaith and happiness| in the years to come. LATIN CAUSES SHOOTING DENVER. Colo,, September 27 (#).— Orville Johncon, 14-year-old junior high chool student, shot and wounded himself probably fatally vesterday be- cause he was unable to keep up with his Latin studies. His mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Johnson, said he had been worrying over his inability to grasp Latin since the Fall school term began. C WIEICWR Preparations sed the world over by l_ bhose who realize the T of pure yrative Soap and Ointrnent U nsurpassed for their R eliable e AR Medicinal ntiseptic A R Proprietors: Soap 25c. Ointment 25¢ and 50c. Potter Drug & Chemical Corpe Malden, Mase. CONOCO POWERI | DANISH KING FELICITATED| SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED | prentices” to lawyers, in that the youth | HANOVER, N. H, September 27 (®). —Award_of two_scholarships of $600 each to Forxest P. Branch of Medford, pal Mass., and William J. Hoffman of Salis- bury, Md., both members of the varsity foot ball team, was announced yesterday by President Ernest M. Hopkins of Dartmouth,. Branch and Hoffman received the two Morrill Allen Gallagher Memorial scholarships. Hoffman is captain of the foot ball team. A Justin H. Smith fund scholarship of $500 was awarded to E. W. Humes of Delaware, Ohio. Johnson scholarships of $700 for ap- plicants from California were awarded to K. Leiber of South Pasadena and R. S. Morris, jr., of La Jolla. D. C, LEBRUN'S HUNTING PARTIES TO START =2 Richly Stocked Forest of Rambouillet Will Be Scene of Sport. By the Associated Press. RAMBOUILLET, France, September 27.—President Lebrun’s hunting parties in the richly stocked forest of Ram- bouillet surrounding France’s Summer and Autumn White House, 40 minutes from Paris, will soon be under way. Following the traditions of the Kings and Emperors who once ruled over his country, the present chief of the French state has social obligations as well as sporting ones to fulfill every Autumn. | pgris, He must give one big shoot for the dipiomatic corps, another for the mem- bers of Parliament and still another for the judiciary. The United States Ambassador, Wal- ter E. Edge, will be missed from the diplomatic party this Fall. A crack shot of the New Jersey National Guard and a sportsman who has never missed the grouse season in Scotland since his residence abroad, Mr. Edge has in- variably finished second or third gun at Rambouillet during his incumbency. Will Be Campaigning. This year, however, he will be at home campaigning for his chief and his party, just at the season when the | hares begin to jump from the thickets and the leaves begin to turn red and gold. However, he got in a few days’ hunting with his old friend and former colleague, Senator David Reed of Penn- sylvania, before sailing to America. President Lebrun's guests take away only a few pieces of the game they bring down with their guns. The greater portion of the day's bag goes to the hospitals of the Seine-et-Oise de- rtment, in which Rambouillet is situated. And as French hoepitals sre for the poor only, who cannot afford private clinics or nursing homes, many an ailing pauper has the skill of the distinguished huntsmen to thank for unexpected delicacies. The President himself. however, does not take part in_the sport. Like the late President Doumer, assassinated last May, President Doumergue before him, and President Poincare, who ruled | during the war years, he has never cared to shoulder a gun and try his Iuck in the flelds and forests. He will turn up, however, as did his predecessors, to preside at hunt break- TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1932. fasts, or rather the chtat ol Fampouiner g sylvan repasts are famous in the those long annals of expert French cookery. Last year the ex-monarch was fortui- tously absent from his retrest at Fon- tainebleau when the shooting season came around. This year he is apt to be back there and a delicate question is thus posed. In view of the fact that France has not only recognized the young Spanish Republic, but bestowed its highest decoration, the grand cross of the legion of honor, on its President, Alcala Za- mora, it 15 doubtful whether the proud heir of the Bourbons would accept the French President’s invitation. It is equally dublous whether, with a possible refusal in the offing, the presidential household would issue the invitation. The situation thus created is right now one of the favorite topics of small talk among the sport-loving members of the diplomatic corps in HUNTED CASHIER NAMED IN OKLAHOMA SHORTAGE Embeszlement Charges Ordered Against Missing Official—Search Tangled by Fears of Foul Play. By the Assoclated Press. CHEROKEE, Okla., Beptember 27— Walter Ingram, bank examiner, had in- | structions todsy from W. J. Bamett, | State bank commissioner, to file em- bezzlement charges against H. C. Doh- erty, missing cashier of the Burlington | State Bank. Barnett directed that Doherty, who disappeared from his home, at Burling- ton, September 18, be charged with em- bezzlement of $8,200 in notes and bonds. The bank was closed a few days after Doherty’s disappearance. Search for Doherty has been pressed in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. Mys- terious notes and telephone calls to rel- atives, indicating the ity he had met with foul play, have complicated the search. His automobile was found abandoned south of Oklahoma City Sep- tember 21. Executioner Slain in Brawl. VIENNA, September 27 () —Dis- | patches from Sofia said Bulgaria's offi- |cial executioner, Hussein Jusara, who cut short the lives of many persons con- demned in connection with the cathe- | dral bombing several years ago, was| killed in a political brawl yesterd | OUTLAY OF BILLIONS TO AID IDLE FAVORED Father Ryan Suggests U. 8. Ex- pend $6,000,000,000 on Public Works as Soon as Possible. By the Associated Press. OMAHA, September 27.—Early ex- penditure of $6,000,000,000 by the Fed- eral Government on public works was urged by Rev. John A. Ryan of Wash- ington, D. C, in an address here last night before the annual convention of the National Conference of Catholic Charities. “If Congress 15 to do its duty it ought to appropriate at least $6,000,000,000 for Federal public works as quickly as possible after the beginning of its sec- ond zession next December,” said Father Ryan, widely known economist and pro- fessor at the Catholic University of America. Stating that the “moral obligation of the Federal Government to contribute to the relief of the unemployed in this grave emergency is beyond question,” Father Ryan said that unless the ameunt he recommends is appropriated | by Congress “it is certain that business will not have increased nor unemploy- ment decreased by as much as 20 per | cent at the beginning of next April.” | 1 is probable, he said, that the figure may be only 5 per cent. Had Congress appropriated $3,000,- | 000,000 in 1930 for public works, he| 5 MOTOR OlL. BEST OIL IN THE WORLD" Change to Autocrat Motor Oil because it spares you trouble and ex- pense. At the first turn of your engine, Autocrat quickly spurts to every moving part—to pistons, to bearings, and you save engine wear, and get a quick start. It stands up under great heat and pro- tects face, been ad beginning of 1931 they might have pre- xfi:cmh:.t AP‘;:’ME-?“M"‘ of Harvard Sary mons e most aerluu: ;r‘:bleml,' =n yan estimated that 20,000« 000 persons will require assistance from some source during the coming Winter, CRITICISM HELD UNJUST Secretary Wilbur Praises Treate ment of Boulder Dam Workers. Recent criticism of treatment workers on Beulder Dam “blew out b: cause it had nothing to rest on,” ace cording to Secretary of Interior ‘Wilbur, Wwho has just returned here from an inspection of the giant Colorado River nonurudcnon project. ler City, where workers on the dam are housed, was described by Wil- bur as the “nicest, cleanest, sweetest little city in the United States.” The Secretary said work on the dam, which the administration has named Hoover Dam, was a year ahead of schedule. When work was begun three ears ago it was estimated it would ake 61, years to complete the project. Wilbur made no estimate yesterday as to when the dam would be finis] SU]TS, $18-Pay $6 Monthly EISEMAN’S, 7th and F You will drive longer upon AUTOCRAT than you have ever dared to drive upon any other oil, and it drains from the crank cose with all the “look™ and “feel” of an oil that has gone hardly 100 miles. AUTOCRAT—THE Ol DIFFERENT FROM ALL OTHERS Beware of Substitutes Try Autocrat the next time you need oil, and judge its advantages for yourself. At the Better Dealers 30¢ every moving sur- ‘g’ART D OIL Ao BAVERSON OIL WORKS, COLUMBIA 5228 HREE MOST FAMOUS CUPS IN THE WORLD These three cups have come to be the nationally recognized symbol of the greatest development in an entirely new coffee satisfaction through the principle of this Service—which provides coffee of unsurpassed quality, exactly suited to any individual taste, at prices which only the world wide A & P organization makes possible. The A & P Coffee Trio—Eight O’Clock, Red Circle and Bokar—are blended from the finest coffee beans the world produces. They are different from each other in zaste but their quality is one quality—the best that money can buy. Absolute coffee freshness, grinding to suit every method of making, flavors to suit every taste—these special advantages, backed by A & P’s 72 years of coffee experience, make A & P Coffee Service unique. And remember, ke coffec you like best is the best for you, mo matter " what it costs. EIGHT O’CLOCK COFFEE MILD AND MELLOW b, ’21¢ RED ClRCLE COFFEE RICH AND FULL-BODIED b 23" B O K A R COFFEE VIGOROUS AND WINEY b 27’ EQUAL IN QUALITY, THOUGH DIFFERENT IN FLAVOR, THESE COFFEES ARE PACKED IN THE BEAN, GROUND FRESH A s P COFFEE SE EXCLUSIVELY IN A &P FOOD STORES IN THE STORE. BOKAR ALSO PACKED THE COFFEE TO S ‘* STEEL-CUT’. RVIC IT YOUR TA Eight Oclock COFFEE E

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