Evening Star Newspaper, December 15, 1932, Page 41

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THE EVENING SrAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THUnSUAY, DGt 15, 1932 AVIATRIX WILL TELL “ADVENTURES IN AlR’ Amelia Earhart Will Speak to Na- tional Geographic Members Tomorrow. 3 Mrs. George Putnam, is the author of two books, one describing her flight in 1928 and the other that of 1932. e ASHES BROUGHT HOME District’s Heroes in the World War , Compiled by Sergt. L. E. Jaeckel. o S recorded in the official cita- A tion, Edward R. Stone, colonel, OPERA N DEAL FORESEENBY DV American Singers Will Find Popular Success Easier, She Says. NEW YORK, December 15 (#).—The ashes of J. Louis Engdahl, former gen- eral chairman of the International La- bor Defense, were brought home from Moscow yesterday by Ada Wfl;ht, | mother of one of the colored defend- an the Scottsboro, Ala., assault case. Engdahl died of pneumonia last month after & tour of Europe with a delegation which included Mrs. Mary Mooney, mother of Tom Mooney. . Despite that his left arm was practi- c:ll{ severed by a train at Woodlans, Fngland, Sapper Billingham of the Roy- al Engineers walked a mile and a half to report the matter to the police, then went to a hospital t have the limb am- CHiLD's SORE THROAT NATIONAL = N 9728‘ ,L}a_ders_ tj)‘l Sgrvzic:erand, “My Adventures in the Air” will be the subject of an address by Amelia Earhart, famous woman fiyer, before members of the N;‘tl:oz':l figé)n;hlc Society at the Washington Auditorium 1918, erhroughout | tomorrow evening. Miss Earhart not feavy SEnng lonly will describe her two Atlantic Poan, oo, Stons | flights—one in 1928 and the solo fight R Ok e | of last Summer—but also will tell of Bas at all times 10 | her other experiences and of her con- I 0S: xPosed | ception of the meaning and possibility position, going over | or"fying in general, especially as they | the top with his|rejaee to women. / regiment four times | "\ “Tarhart has been the reciplent | ence greatly the future of the Metro- | ; in seven days, atter | o\ BOIC O Summer she re- politan, its friends believe. The state- | all his battalion | Of MARY NEEORE, o0l medal of the Na- ments of its officers show that famous commanders had|{ona) Geographic Society, the presen- institution to be exactly at balance | bfen killed orliation being made by President Hoover. sensitive to the least breeze, whether| wounded during the | gy "5 special resolution of Congress | financial or artistic. % extreme offensive | o 3oPQico given the Distinguished | “The day is not far distant.” de'i actions. He re-|puing Cross, being the first woman so | clares Mme. Mueller, “when it will be| peatedly refused to |y onored. Other honors have been con- casier for an American to achieve a g0 to & place of |ferred upon her by Great Britain, Tastes good—sate. 35c all success in opera in his own safety during the | prance, Belgium and Italy. - by than it will be for his foreign | most scvere bom- |~ Miss Earhart, who in private life is Grand Opening and Food Show 23d Infantry, 2d Division, Amer- ican Expeditionary Force, was awarded the Croix de Guerre of France for heroic gallantry in action with the enemy at Medeah Farm, France, October 3 to 10, By the Associated Press. 4 NEW YORK, December 15.—Is there | 2 new deal coming in opera? There is, says Maria Mueller, leacing soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Co., at least, so far as American singers are concerned | And this new deal is likely to influ- FOOD STORES INC — give them Thoxine poive in 15 min. ‘or money A prescription, ot & gargiec ua[ii'(/’ S v Grand Opening Friday, Dec. 16th, 7 to 10 P.M. L. SILVER, 1820 15th St. N.W. Prizes Given Away. Post-Toasties, 2 - 15¢ Kellogs Corn Flakes. . 2~ 15¢ Wheaties .. . . .2 25¢ S = aroggists: = L bardment, even| Thursday Eve., Dec. 15th after having been 7 gassed. His great devotion to . to 10, Self-sacrificial conduct were a Bindeman’s Sunlight Mkt. Just Remodeled inspiration to the men of the 4400 7th St. N.W, Cor. Webster Baskets of Groceries FREE Prizes—Flowers for the Ladies YELLOW BAG Your United Food Store Grocer is keenly interested in supplying the highest quality food at the lowest cost possible. Owner-operation of his own store assures you always of courteous treatment and an interest in your welfare. £ . Mueller points out that this eason American singers account fof | serl almost 40 per cent of the total ar! n the Metropolitan’s roster, and that con: ‘among the new singers engaged nearly | com half are Americans. I R Increase of Americans. | WG | There exists (and probably it will| He was retired with the rank of col- | grow) a definite pride in American ac- | onel and resides at 31 Sycamore avenue, Complishment in opera, Mme. Mueller | Takoma Park, Md. | feels. It is evident that such a feeling w?.ulfi have lfgn;xdvrnble influence on DIES IN BO”.ER BLAST IMajor Killed on R GL 0007 200 00202850 7000 7% “Helens too fat to ride. She's your age — but you look years younger be- cause you're still $0 slim!™ nce at appointment, Washing- W07 %4 T 2 7 000 D Mexican A: — in numbers itan Opera Co. | Ship at Manzanillo—4 Scalded. ' Ao s inception some years before| MEXICO CITY, December 15 (P).— | our {I U [ C the turn of this century. For the most Maj. Santiago Rogas of the Mexican | ' % Pride of the UNITED FOOD Fancy Leg O’ Lamb . . . 2lc| N iz \ Z . b.23c| zanillo, The ship was waiting for 60 prisoners | from Mexico City to be taken to the penal colony at the Tres Marias Is- your Fancy Rib Roast . . Chuck Roast . . . . ®15¢c | Puffed Wheat . ..13c 7 2072%% % | Puffed Rice ... ...16¢ Quaker Qats. . . » G¢ United Pancake . Flour .....2» 15¢ Gold Medal I Buckwheat, 2 = 19¢ Pure Honey 19¢ Karo Syrup—"i2 10c Log Cabin— % 23c Cane and Maple Syrup 3w ]Tc Campbell’s SOUPS 3 e 25¢ 12-b. bag ....... DROMEDARY DIXIE-MIX For Fruit Cake Lb. Can 35c Snowdrift .1 ® »= 15¢ College-Inn Chicken-a-la-King .. I 7 2% part this group is composed 0f German, | Army was killed and four seamen scald- | ' French and Italian singers. Obviously |ed yesterday when boilers of the war |* we have watched the rapid increase of | vessel Progresso exploded while the ship |, EAT Ry-Krisp, and your figure will tell only flattering things Americans in our ranks with no little |lay at anchor in the Harbor of Man- | about you! These crisp wafers interest. What are our feelings? “We ure pleased. Really, we are grateful to America for developing and with the teasing whole rye flavor are perfect with breakfast, lunch or dinner—yet they actually help financing what is perhaps the greatest single organization for opera iu the|lands. The ship was temporarily dw-i you to stay slim, by helping to keep you fit. world. I have always hoped that some | abled. K | Pork Roast . . . . . m.15¢ Rib Lamb Chops . . .m® 29c Veal Cutlet . . . . .®» 35¢ Auths Smoked Sausage . 1 25¢ I ORIENS. Sausage Meat 1. 25¢ | | uneeoa sakers || Fountain Brand Hams . . 20c | THOMPSON'S MILK e 13c | COMET RICE 2 T e i et ) pemeres 100% Washington Product Codks largs, whits and flaky “JELL.O” America’s Famous Dessert Assorted Flavors 27 15¢ I Pillsbury Flour 7% i 7 7 % Z America. Chase & Sanborn, 35¢ White House ....35¢ 7 sponsible for the future of opera in are lined with millions of pores like and that should the Ameri- tiny bottles continually supplying ble for the Metropolitan fall numbers, there would ensue a moisture to the delicate tissues . .. ¢ yntil you “catch cold.” lessened American interest in opera; perhaps a cessation of interest, Then_these “bottles” get plugged up. phlegm accumulates, affording Ancestry No Longer Hidden. Recent sensational American suc- dangerous germs a breeding place. Your throat feels hot and dry. cesses in opera have brought a com- plete about-face in the old habit of Tickling, irritation and coughing set in. hiding the singer's American ancestry, Your cough will be curkd only she feels. when the flow of the natural fluid is increased, loosening the phlegm so that it can be expelled. Many || cough “remedies’ contain numbing drugs which merely deaden the }| nerves but don't get at the root of the trouble. PERTU a_ scientific remedy, which doctors have prescribed for many years, is the extract of & famous herb which opens the tiny glands, stimulates the flow of the throet's natural moisture and brings quick relief. It helps nature heal that awful cough from the Inside out When you feel that warning dry- ess take a few spoons of PERTUSSIN. Sold at all drug dvertisement E Ml e Iy o 2 % 15-o0x. Jar % Bisquick ........33c : Hersheys Cocoa = 15¢ 1%-1b. can “Today achieves any opera is place of “The Am mitted the House_duriny the past have done much t dition that good field of an American singer who measure of success in to admit the DN the e rare in the . They learn quickly: I d them often. We Euro- rarely required to sing in reign to our . The is expect- ed to sing equally well in three! | “His cperatic career is not an easy | one.” 7% P2 Granulated ' Refined in U. S. A. RED i | 10-243¢ IOWA STATE.......». 35 BUTTER UNITED BRAND. . .. ll: 30: CHATKA CRABMEAT 29¢| San Giorgio Pound Package M i, ‘ s,,?:{ft‘i!, box 10c¢]| FLAKO Pie Crust 2 pkes. 25¢ Blue Ribbon Evaporated Peaches 2 1. pkes. 23¢ Good Fruit Cake improves with age, Get your Gunder- sheimer’s Special Fruit Cake | Sl per Ib. 39c Free from Grit. Brewer-Snyder’s Cooked Hominy a 10c day America would be ably represented — | a C in sufficient numbers in her own in- Although foreign singers ave but guests, Mme. Mueller feeels thi 1l continue to have a shi | operatic activities. B cels that || A")s COUGH RE THE WHOLE RYE WAFER to some extent American: Your throat and bronchial tubes | at every meal 7 izations in Scotland the National Council for . which has been or- 722 2% 2 9 1% Vegetables & Fruits— | Spinach . . . . . 21 19c| Onions . . . . . 3 10c o« o o Zbuches I5c | e+ + « o Zbunches ]3¢ | Potatoes . . . . . 10m15¢c | SweetPotatoes . . 4 10c | | Iceberg Lettuce . . 2nhead: 19c | Celery Hearts . . 2 bunches 19c | Florida Oranges . . <= 25¢ | Fancy Grapfruit . 3 & 4 fer 25¢ | | Delicous Apples . . 41 23¢ | Cooking Apples . . 5ms23¢ Tokay Grapes . . . 3m:25¢| 2 7 7 2 7 2% bg Special Price, can THIS LOG CABIN W | SYRUP ACTUALLY RSN MAKES PANCAKES il & ' SEEM SO MUCH LIGHTER! TP, _Hall advises hushan dSs 0 W 2 Z 7 TOMATOES Le Grande Peas 1 of hot cakes -+ batcrich, golden 108 . And JacK’ College Inn Rice Dinner cate, maple ; : Mussolina Spaghetti extra flaV‘(_’ri‘t . 3 & ; N seem S0 1g! Fruit Cake Ingredients of Highest Quality Specially Priced Currants .......14c|Figs . ..... 2ms 45¢ Raisins 5% 9c |Dates . .....2m 25¢ Citron . . . . %-m pke. 9c| Almonds . .. . . w. 25¢ Lemon Peel ..... 9c|Walouts .......27¢ Orange Peel . . . .. 9c|Pecan Meats. % n. 25¢ HAT'S right, Mrs. Hall! And this is the reason. Log Cabin Syrup has just the right body to really sat- urate pancakes with delicious maple flavor. And as a result the cakes simply fall apart at the touch of a fork. Try it for yourself—and see! To achieve this consistency and flavor, we use three distinct kinds of sugar in making Log Cabin. Delicious flavor. Then just the right amount of fine cane sugar togive thatsmooth, Denetrating consistency that makes _pancakes served with Log Cabin seem so amazingly light and tender. Give your husband hot cakes and Log Cabin Syrup for breakfast to- morrow! And you’ll want to use it, too, on muffins and other hot breads, justasyoudoonpancakesand waffles. Vermont and Canadian maple to Log Cabin Syrup is a product of give that delicate, mellow maple General Foods. LOG CABIN

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