Evening Star Newspaper, October 2, 1932, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, OCTOBER 2, 1932—PART ONE. A1 Afilw HE”] V"’ Al IMUSSOLINI COUNSELS THINKERS |24 sists, lesd of costsing| “PAINTED DESERT” ADDED | TheXouny s Yop approach more and more the sources of 1 TO MOVE NEARER TO REALITIES |58, S5 5 T soom acrs dovs o artsns optimism for their hard work.” Park by Hoover Proclamation. The “Painted Desert” ares of 53,300 T[] AITAIN SUEBESS Scorns Word “Intellectuals” as Applied to| NAVY CHANGES MADE |ucres nas been aaded to tho Petrited T Forest National Monument in Arizona Admiral Leigh in Charge at Ha- under a proclamation signed by Presi- i § Brain Workers—Welcomes Marvard Survey Shows : i wai and Canal Zone. il TR B 13191321 F STREET Wealth and Influential Fam- Their Co-operation. , The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Naval | peprment of the Interior said 3,832 Districts, with headquarters at Pearl [, .oq giready were Government owned BOSTONIAN SHOES STETSON HATS i Harbor, Hawall, and the Canal Zone, | gng the remainder privately owned. ily Less Important. By the Associated Pres the celebration of the tenth anniversary | Fespectively, yesterday were placed un- | mye jang is a few miles north of the = ROME, Octol —Premier Mussolint | of Fascism, Il Duce said: der the direction of Admiral Richard | onument. A strip a mile wide con- H announced his “invincible repugnance”| «Ng jncompatibility exists between | H. Leigh, commander-in-chief of the | IS e £ .;lgvevA;s(‘;%;‘crdom:s; T RO to the word “intellectuals” lodng; \vges,;-mum and culture. The regime con- nguad st?tese:‘leit. PR nec| e . " H . October 1.—] ity, | he addressed a peace meeting attende i rders issued by Secretary Adams T T E not the luck of birth into a wealthy | by 10,000 Fascist leaders, representing {i’:'&;éfiflfi ?{.‘3.;.‘%‘2"&‘33‘ sciencer " gave Admiral Leigh supervision of all Air Guests From All Europe OmorrOW y Ou Can urChaSC H or_infiuential family nor the help of /120,000 Italian brain workers. He urged the leaders to bring profes- | administrative detalls of the districts, B E influential friends, seems most reSPON"| 1y was the first public sign of the | slonal men more and more into the life | insofar as they affect the fleet, instead | Airmen from nearly every country in 3 H sible for success in the business world.| T¢ e | fEattars Bttt e i e : ; 5 -operation of this class with Fascism. |of the nation. He said he was op. e Navy Departme: ashing pe hich ol s 8 BrinCipAl conClusion O | They have been obligated to enroll in |posed to an “artistocracy of abstract S e VL was held recently at Heston, England, 'S “Sosiyn “of Harvard University, | Fasclst assoclations "but have constl- |and unfruitgul culture” | Shell Trade Grows Bapidly. | 3, Brivate figers who had enjojed hos- ] . i ead- | tuted an admittedly doubtful spot “Culture, in order to produce 7 5 pum’*g xé‘ A"émcalnolri." ‘i‘.“f‘a‘né“‘sfl.lme Fascist organization. he explained, “must be based on ex-| The oyster shell trade grew in vol- | forelgn aircraft were present, and ;‘“i “5“ \:'t:;.c"t]' i -riuf ttudy was| To the professors, lawyers, editors, | perience with life and human compre-| ume from about $100,000 in 1918 to|many machines carried & pllot and - ahcaton ki, doctors and writers gathered to begin ' hension of facts. Scholars, professional | $2,000,000 in 1931 passenger. ‘Suit or To Based on the answers to a questionnaire by several thousand leading business men. i The teachers found that about 40 per cent of those questioned received some help, financial or influential, from relatives or friends; about 40 per cent | gained prominence without such help and about 20 per cent were neither par- ticularly favored nor disfavored. O es O Success Without Aid. “Success,” the study reports, “achieved pcoat bearing this Lab T St Albans )fi?/@/%fl.‘sf/w// WASHINGTON, O. T, without the aid of relatives or friends seems to be more characteristic of [ American business leaders than suc . achieved with such aid. Nonetheless, ] a very substantial minority appears to have been helped by relatives and friends. About 57 cent of all business| leaders included the study were sons of busin \ of one kind or an- ther 0 por cent were sons d large owners. | the study says, leaders of the present ; generation are drawn from the ‘big busi- | RLRT IR Get busy with your spade—dig into the rich brown earth! The , soil and weather are just right for evergreens to get a sturdy grip. These are grown in a near- otk of major execu n;.w cla: Izm»cmr.[: may be said to e 4 will character the group responsible for y Delaware nursery, and wi 3 s . ;hr- control and direction of American thrive in this climate belivcred 7th, 8th and E Sts.—NAtional 9800 Jusiness. 2% o e = “ Berth Not Important. to customer within two days No Connection With Any Other Washington Store after being dug! Annual Fall Sale’ Tomorrow “A proportion of 30 per cent, to be sure, is hardly large enough to be typi- cal of the entire group; but there is reason to believe that the representa- dion of this class among business lead- s is tending to increase as time goes on.” The study points out that so far as the most important business leaders are concerned. the fact of birth seemingly | has no especial importance. As for the | tendency of ownership of management of industry to become “hereditary,” the study estimates that about 14 per cent of present-da; 1 re in the same ere their fathers. eiders whose fathers skilled or unskilled, com- 10.8 of the whole: whose fathers | were farmers, 12.4 per cent; clerks or salesmen, 5 per cent; executives or owners of business, 56.7 per cent; pro- | fessional, 13.4 per cent, and others, 1.7 per cent. ! $274,742,000 COST OF SEAWAY PROJECT| | Power Development in lnterna-! tional Rapids Section Largest Single Item. St. Albans Topcoats $185o A deposit will reserve your Special! Gold Dust Cypress 18t0 24 $1 Inches selection for later delivery. - 59C each 15 to 18 inch Irish Juniper. 15 to 18 inch Norway Spruce. 9 to 12 inch Globe Arbor Vitae. Camels Hair, Harris Tweeds and Fleecy Llamas that boast more hand tailoring and finer linings and inner construction than their low $1850 price warrants. The new ted Press | opment costs were set Ly the State Depart- | tin as the largest single L T T e T e T e e T e T T T 1 the international | n of the proposed St. Law- | e e e e e T Shapely, compact shrubs, In ng detailed figures of the proj- sprinkled throughout nhe‘hlnlint; style favorites for } Fall—double- ect, the Denariment ecstimated $274.- with what looks like a sheen of breasted models with all-around 712,600 must be expended to develop pure gold dust. - s ®iis ccction, with Canada to pay $59,- Special! Special! N F 11 belts or single-breasted models with 230,000 The estimates showed an s i expenditure of $132.452.000 for works : €W a half or no belts at all. primarily for power, w tures as follows Works solely for navigation, $34,- 183,000 and works common to power and navigation development, $108,102,- 000. These costs were given in greater detail than the statements made in July when the St. Lawrence seaway treaty Was signed by Canada and the United States. The joint board of engineers esti- h other expendi- Oriental Pyramidal Arbor Vitae Arbor Vitae 3104 3104 Foot $1 Foot $1.65 The sturdiest and most popu- lar of all the upright i St. Albans Hats One of the most attractive of El H s 5 £ gxau‘é thaLLti(le entire waterway from all evergreens—and very easy Narsow and solamnar i he Great Lakes to Montreal will cost v. Formal or columnar. = y y $543429.000. Of this sum it is esti- 69(: each to grow F’m- 0 ,:nd, to add beauty to your . anS mated that the United States will spend Nste tho law prica! - $272,453,000 and Canada $270,976,000. Tte international rapids section ex- 10 to 12 inch Mugho Pine. inch Ameri bor tends about 40 miles from Ogdensburg, 18 to 24 inch American Arl L G S d . Y., to Cornwall, Vitae. el 12t 18 ik ibrien Arbor awn Grass See Vitae. { Bull-Frogging in Florida. The big citles of this country con- Bume a great quantity of bullfrog meat and the supply comes principally from Florida. One man engaged in the hunt- ing of the frogs caught 168 pounds in one night, which is thought to be a Tecord. The hunters generally work in groups fer the sake of company as much ®s anything, for frogging is a business that has to be done at night, and the SUITS $1850 Extra Trousers $4 Ib.........19¢c Slbs.........9c 9 SC each 15 to 18 inch Mugho Pine. 18 to 24 inch Plume Cypress. 18 to 24 inch Golden Plume_ Cypress. 18 to 24 inch Moss Cypress. 2 to 3 foot American Arbor darker the night the better for those Vitse. who are combing the shores, 15 to 18 inch Globe Arbor An essential item in the frog hunter's Vitae. ®quipment is a headligat, which usually 18 to 24 inch Siberian Arbor is worn on the cap. The bright beams from these lights not only enable the stalker to see his quarry, but they also blind the frogs and make it easy to cap- ture them. Some of the hunters use a contraption nuch like a fly swatter fastened to the end of a long pole. When they see the bulging eyes of a bullfrog they strike \quickly with this long-handled swatter, stunning the creature. This is a good method, because the frog seldom is killed, and he is taken back home alive and kicking. But it is almost impossible Vitae. 75c¢ \e“h $1'45 each - 9 to 12 inch Golden Arbor 18 to 24 inch Pfitzer Juniper. $ Vitae. v, P 3 9 5 each 15 to 18 inch Boxwood. 2121103 fucC ElumeiCrpress 1' Whether you prefer the new modi- %0 use the swatter in thick grass, so 18 to 24 inch Irish Juniper. 18 to 24 inch Golden Arbor fied drape or the more conventional most of the hunter depend on a hook- 9 to 12 inch Greek Juniper. 6 each Vitae. ; i d i like gig on the end of a long pole. 18 00724 ek Norway Sceia. o we have your size and pattern in i TR 15 to 18 inch Plume Cypress. : 5 all the new shades of brown and Boy's Legs Broken 20 Times. 15 to 18 inch Golden Plume | 18 to 24 inch Koster's Blus $3 05 each gray. Our master tailors, with Arthur Brown of Weymouth, Eng- Cypress. rsd ® g 4 Tand, is again in a hospital with a broken leg. It is the twentieth time he has suffered fractured limbs, and he has spent half of his 18 years in hospitals while waiting for the bones to knit. His first fractyre was when he was 2:, and the longest time he has been without one was 14 months. His last fracture was on a doctor's doorstep. Many doctors have visited him, and they say it is a case of brittle 12Y; to 18 inch Moss Cypress. 18 to 24 inch Pyramidal Ar- bor _Vitae. 15 to 18 inch Canade Hem- lock. 8 to 10 inch Dwarf Old Eng- lish Boxwood. Mail and’Phone Orders Promptly 15 to 18 inch Koster's Blue Spruce. This hat, the St. Moritz, is the many years of experience in their particular favorite of young men in school and business and older favor, guarantee your perfect fit. men who still retain a youthful spirit. Special! Holland Peat wie $1.95 $1.25 each 10 to 12 inch Dwarf Old Eng- lish Boxwood. 18 to 24 inch Boxwood. 2 to 3 foot Irish Juniper. ¥ 12 to 15 inch Greek Juniper. 2 to 3 foot Norway Spruce. FHETIO ALV AL AL OURALOEROAAOOARA TR AL OO T O OO TR0 Rich Loamy Marsh Soil The lowest price in 17 years on TREE Siliciipinne R 100 1bs. 2 to 2% foot Golden Plome b i Stuars, NAtional | | i il P e BOSTONIAN Arbor Vitae. Graduate Experts 18 to 24 inch Canada Hem- Tock. Call for our repre- sentative fo examine your . trees without oblightion or expense. Have your trees inspected twice a year. The Forman & Biller Tree Expert Co. Phone Clarendon 500, 567. down weeds and con- serves moisture in the soil. 9800. SHRUBBERY SIXTH FLOOR %1 Extra! Correct Fertilizer .. For Fadll Planting Soil Expert Will Test Your Soil Baugh Accidated Shoes for Men '5 15 to 18 inch Golden Arbor Vitae. Sturtevant Blowers OVHORTHE PP RO DLEN DR DAEOOETOR T DOELATE PLORRAADIOLT IO NOLRDUNLL D UOCLLLRLALLEDALRED LRI TR M R FOR BURNING This is the new off-the-face Ham- A $5 bill now buys famous P e Bostonian Style and Quality. BUC::((;‘:'II‘EAT Bring in samples of your soil. An expert will be !lere tomorrow Bon e Meal £ ml:;ll‘;l':l“rb rf;l:‘m dark gray Sof.t, s dl;,yglove-lik? fitti:.!yg Will Cut Your Coal Bill 409 with machines for testing it. He will gladly advise 'you'how it . 'b:k" hai ndlomelyu 'I:.yl o 40 L{mplg&ly Oi‘;:uu?: wlllh both can be improved for the best growing results, and will 4give you 5 Ibs. . .50¢c 25 Ibs. ......$1.50 $ 7 5 black or brown ealfskin. room and boiler ther- 380.00 planting instructions, and valuable advice on landscaping. No 10 Ibs. . .75¢ 50 Ibs. ......$3.00 2 Other Bo ians, $5 16 $8 fii'l‘ESBEALL & SHARP obligation, whatever! 100 Ibs. .....$5.00 PR td 2o NC. National 1964 734 10th St. N.W.

Other pages from this issue: