Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
B_I2 WANDERING YOUTHS: SHUN INSTITUTIONS Boys Usually Manage to Pro- mote Their Own Charities as They Travel. This is the seventh of a series of datly dispatches by o writer who traveled back and forth across the country to get the story of the thousands of homeless, wandering boys. BY DANIEL ROBEET MAUE. With 20-odd hitch-travelers in Louis- ville, Ky., I took an early breakfast at the Salvation Army’s board. Oatmeal in blue milk, bread and kitchen-sweetened coffee; such was the fare. The basement dining hall, less cheerful than the aajoming boiler room, where we had warmed ourselves before eating, had only one bit of decoration— & 5-by-8 inch blue card hung high in one cormer. “God Answers Your Prayer” read the message thereon. A young guest, with clean, freckled face and capable-looking hands, studied the bright card for a moment. “I guess T'll ask for a'malted milk,” he said. Then he went back at his plate on the oilcloth. The older men talked freely. They called across the table as to familiars. The younger fellows said little; a tousled one at my left said nothing. An 18-year-old at my right answered my question with a slow smile and in deep voice. “From Texas. Going to North- ern Ohio.” Line of Demarkation. There seemed to hang, in the at- mosphere of the room itself, a tacitly accepted line of demarkation between the four or five professional hoboes and the younger men, who talked less with complaint and more with hope of find- ing “something somewhere,” something at which to work. Jests, undecorated quarters, the quick breaking up of the group outside the basement door—where had I known them before, I had the impression that all this was familiar, that I had some time, somewhere been with an identical gToup of men. The true significance of this bit of impressionism was not to come to me for days; not until I had abandoned the small roadster I had driven from New York City, had prowled the railroad yards southward from St. Louis and had ridden the freight trains {rom El Paso to Los An- geles. Those whose company I sought were the most restless young men and boys of today, the younger element of the great transient public of the United States. Bewildered, but still resource- ful, the youths in unprecedented num- ber wander from city to city. from coast to coast. Without funds, they live from day to day, sometimes off the perplexed municipal charities, but more often by far through promotion of their own charity. Lynn Thompkins, the lame youth whose story I had heard the night be- fore and which I told in this paper yes- terday, was one of these. I decided he was of 100 per cent social value. He left to hitch northward to Michigan and the farm where he expected to find a brother he had been seeking in New Or- leans. In my roadster I went out on United States Highways 150 and 50, through Southern Indiana and Illinois, to St. Louis. A Parade of Wanderers. It was Sunday, a brisk and lovely day. Men, women and children, going and coming, were in great numbers all along the route, on which they solicited trans- portation. The through passengers were easily distinguishable from the local travelers. The main body of the tran- sient youth, also readily recognized by the experienced eye, seemed to be + ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 3 Above: A group of wandering boys reading magazines in Salvation Army headquarters in East St. Louis. Below: Arthur Schneider, who is mentioned in the accompanying story. This photo- graph,-taken in St. Louis, shows Arthur waiting for a ticket which will provide food and a night's lodging. “get a little better” if only he couhil learn to play the guitar. [ I found subject material throughout | downtown St. Louis. The counter man in a cafeteria_had just hitched down| from Seattle. I talked with his friend, | who, £till unemp:oyed, had returned from | a round-trip to Houston, T:<x. On the | way to the Montana pool room, Mar- ket street, I met a youth I had known in New York City. In the pool room I sat next to a diminutive fellow with a | mop of soiled curls half under a worn | cap. He wore, further, misshapen shoes, | cheap trousers and layers of uninviting upper garments. His round face and pale eyes smiled friendly-wise. Suspicious of Cigar. | “I gotta get to a hospital” he said | by way of opening conversation. ~An | instant later he wanted me to feel his | head to see if it was hot. Born in Detroit, having no { family support, he had been going about the land more than a year. He| accurately described for me 'the ave- nues of Minneapolis, the subway sys- tems and outlying streets of New York | City, and the best pan-handling streets | of Los Angeles. | “Keep yourself clean when you get| on the highway.” he advised. ~ “Don't | be t00 conspicuously dressed * * *" He | inspected my outfit. wiul expen- | sive,” he sald of my wind-breaker. | disapproved of my knit cap, but he thought my worn trousers were quite | the proper thing. He was_ obviously | suspicious of the cigar I had been | smoking. In the end. remembering that it was his conversation, I dared not ask his name. | T was sorry to interrupt his observa- tions about the men, chiefly young, who played at the pool tables or passed be- fore us. “Awful looking bunch,” he said of three who had just entered. “Fools go out and bum 20 cents and then spend half or all of it on pool.” * ok ok = form of | (Tomorrow: Nine miles of weather in the Du Po, Iil., railroad yards.) (Copyright, 193 North American Newspaper e, Inc.) LANGLEY CENTER GIVES by the Alliancy Offering of Non-Perishable Food toward the Southwest. My passenger list for the day was fairly representative of the drift to the Northwest—a small girl going to visit an aunt two towns from home, & mid- dle-aged war veteran and racing driver going from Louisville to Vincennes, Ind.; 2 village boy traveling 80 miles to call on a sweetheart and Al Peshette, 21, an All-California end from & prep school foot ball team, going to his parental home, in Oakland, Calif., after a swing about the United States. He was a little disappointed because he had failed to hitch a steamship to Cuba. o) son of an t(g:klunddcontmmr e n a deep-voiced figure beside me in the seat. I had taken him in frim the dusk left after 8 red sunset. Cocksure, he said he was “still a gentleman.” He had left home to get out on his own—which he couldnt seem to find. Pride had kept him wandering about. I wouldn't go back even now.” he id, “if it weren't for mother. She's en coaxing me to go back to school.” Left Him in St. Louis. He had first solicited with s crew of magazine venders in St. Louis. The crew manager had abseonded with Al's due of $53. Al went hitch-traveling then with the son of the president of ® bank in Salt Lake City. Down to the Gulf of Mexico, across to Florida, up to Washington and the New Eng- land States, back to the Great Lakes, and 5o toward home. He was particu- larly pleased with himself over having located the crew manager of magazine salesmen by calling at New York City offices, where he worthy’s head. Like a great puppy, Al was exuberant over himself and life. I last saw him as he stood looking up and down a brilliantly lighted street in the heart of St. Louis. Arthur Schneider, 19, I deliberately selected at the end of a row of graying heads along a wooden bench in the homeless men’s registration office of St. Louls. Arthur went with me to the sidewalk before the building. I ap- proached him through questions about Toutes out of St. Louis, particularly that to Kansas City. _“Sure, I know,” he said. “Say. I've ridden that way so often my thumb got all swelled up.” Seated beside me on the concrete ledge, his hands about his bare ankles, he smiled squintingly at me from under his tangled blonde hair and began his long story. had punched that Left an Orphan, Arthur's mother and father died be- fore this son was 3. With three brothers and a sister the orphan had gone first to a “home” and then to a large, adopted family of a policemnn' who was “paid by the head"—Arthur's words. The policeman managed an eighth grade education for the boy, who was set adrift in 1929 when the kind, elderly man died. Since then Arthur had been Summering in St. Louis and ‘Wintering in New Orleans. He would, within the week, leave for that South- ern city. There's a brother in each of the cities. “But their wives can't see me,” said the homeless fellow. His last steady job had been in a St. Louls cap factory 18 months before. He had been, for a Summer month, a bus boy on a river boat. He caddied when possible. He made a few 50-cent pieces by exercising polo ponies. Or he simply asked for the food and shelter he fre- quently could not provide through his own efforts, “All this can end almost any place for me,” Arthur said in explaining his mode of life. With three of his young and traveled friends he had recently sung a few cowboy songs for radio broadeast. He had decided he could WHERE _’rd'mm:f ' TIA ‘Tamales, Tortillas, Chile con Carne, Bistec a la_Parilla, Arroz con Pollo, Molé Poblano 1321 Nevr Yerk Ave. NW. ) ‘Will Be Price of Ad- mission. A program of entertainment spon- sored by the Community Center De- partment will be presented tonight at the Langley Center. An offering of non-perishable food to be distributed | to the poor of the community will be the price of admission. ‘The presentation will include orches- tra selections by “The Vagabonds,” a | moving picture entitled “The Progress | of Aviation,” and a play, “Up in the| Air, Over There” written by Alfred | Moe and played by members of the Aero Club of McKinley High School. A | community dance will conclude the | evening’s_entertainment. | Yesterday afternoon a play, “Every- | body Happy,” was presented at the Burroughs Center for the benefit of the | needy, with food as the price of admls--‘ on. SHANNON TO SPEAK Will Address Missouri Meeting Tonight. Representative Shannon of Missouri will address the first Winter meeting of the Missouri Society of the District tonight at 8:30 o'clock at the Washing- ton Hotel. His topic will be “Govern- ment in Business.” | Dancing, cards and musical selections by Mrs. Roy Woodruff, will feature the | rest of the program. Mrs, Charles P. Keyser, Mrs. Edward D. Hays, Mrs. Emest E. Hall and Elton L. Marshall are chairmen of the committees ar- ranging for the meeting. TODAY'S AMUSEMENTS. National-—“There’s Always Juliet,” at 2:20 and 8:20 p.m. Gayety—"Auto Girls,” burlesque, at| 2:15 and 8:15 p.m. Metropolitan—"Scarlet Dawn,” at 12, | 2, 4,6 8 and 10 pm. R-K-O Keith’s—"“The Unwritten Law,” at 11:22 am., 1:27, 3:34, 5:40, 7:40 and 9:52 p.m. ! Earle—"Undercover Man,” at 11:20 | am., 1:49, 4:33, 7:17 and 9:47 p.m. Stage shows at 12:54, 3:39, 6:23 and 8:53 p.m Palace—“Red Dust,” at 11:50 am., 1:50, 3:50, 5:45, 7:45 and 9:45 p.m. Fox—“Night After Night,” at 11 am., | 1:45. 4:30, 7:25 and 10:10 pm. Stage shows at 12:30, 3:15, 6:10 and 9 pm. | ptown New York,” at ., 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45 and Society’s Tivoli—"Little Orphan _Annie,” 2:25, 4:10, 6, 7:45 and 9:35 p.m. Central—“I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang,” frem 11 am. to 11 p.m. Ambassador—“Old Dark House,” at 6:15, 8:10 and 10 p.m. MOTHER FROMAN'S Whole Roast Chicken Box...$1.25 Whole Fried Chicken Box Also a Real Oyster Box.. We Arc Also Taking Orders for Whole 10-Lb. Xmas Turkey and vered. $5.00 All_Trimminzs, Deli N CALL BY OR PHONE NA. 301 1108 9th St. N.W. __No Delivery Charge Anywhere in D. C. _ Reduced Parking Rates Evenings and Sundays at | 10:00—Evelyn Herbert and Robert Today on the Radio (All programs scheduled for Eastern Standarq¢ Time and are subject to change without notice.) 315.6 Meters. I WRC 950 Kilocycles. 1:30—Rhythmic Serenade. 1:45—Entire opera “Don Giovanni” from Metropolitan Opera Hi 5:15 P.M.-5:16 P.M.—— Advt. TONIGHT'S BIG I-MINUTE PROGRAM Listen in for News of Olmsted's De Luxe $1.50 Dinner Served ‘Tomorrow for $1.00 OLMSTED GRILL 5:15—Sherman Orchestra. 5:30—Afternoon Varieties. 5:45—Seckatary Hawkins. 6:00—Wardman_Concert Ensemble. 6:20—Weather Forecast. 6:30-6:45 p.m. WILKINS COFE PROGRAM MARGUERITE CROMWELL Rugdolph Schramm and His Music (Every Tues., Thurs,, Sat.) | | 6:45—The Electric Circle. 7:00-7:15 P.M: The ROCK CREEK SUNSHINE GIRL And Her Sunshine €ongs Are Brought to You by the Makers of ROCK CREEK GINGER ALE The BIG Bottle at the Sensible Price Advt. | 7:15—“Our Vanishing Freedom,” by Merle Thorpe. | 17:30—George Olsen’s Orchestra. | 7:45—Mayflower Concert Ensemble. 8:00-8:01 P.M. Advt ANOTHLR AMERICAN BOSCH AUTO RADIO FREE THIS WEEK Tune in—Drive in DUPONT GARAGE 2020 M Street Northwest Washington’s Oldest Garage 8:00—Echoes of the Palisades. 8:30—"The Budget Problem,” by Henry | P. Seideman. “ 9:00—Erno Rapee's Orchestra. | Hol- | licay. 11:00—Lasc-minute news. 11:02—Shcreham Dance Orchestra. 11:30—Night Song. 12:00—Paul Whiteman's Orchestra. 12:30 to 1:00—Mark Fisher and his orchestra. 228.9 Meters. OL 1,310 Kilacycles. 4:30—Organ Echoes. 5:00—Something for Every One. 5:30—Dorothy Reddish, soprano. 5:45—Walter T. Holt. 6:00—Popular Song' Composers. 6:15—Mandolin_Orchestra, 6:44—Weathor forecast. 6:45—Musical program. ouse. | WMAL 8:00—Week End Varieties. 8:30 to 9:00—Central Union Mission Glee Club. 475.9 Meters. 630 Kilocycles. 2:00—Afternoon Frolickers. 2:30—Sunshine Trio. 2:45—Jolly Fellows Dance Orchestra. 3:15—Lena Kash, pianist. 3:30—Salon Orchestra. 4:00—At Home with the 10 O'Clock Club. 4:30—Tea Ensemble. 5:60—Nation-] Dance Marathon, 15—Sunday school lesson. :30—Marimba =ojos by Fleming Orem. 5:45—Flashcs from The Evening Star, by Howard P. Bailey. 6:00—Time and program resume. 6:01—Evening Serenaders. 6:30—Sunshine Charley. 6:45—"Panning the Public Employe,” by Luther C. Steward. 7:00—Willard Concert Orchestra. 7:30—Aristocrats cf Melody. 8:00—Bcernstein's Orchestra. 8:30—Edwin_Singer, baritone. 8§:45—Jeno Sevely, violinist. 9:00—Studio program. 9:15—Robert Ruckman, organist. 10:00—News flashes. 10:15—National Dance Marathon. 10:30—McWilliams’ Orchestra. 11:00—Meyer Davis’ Orchestra, | 11:30—Theater program. | 12:00—Weather forecast. 'WJS 205.4 Meters. 1,460 Kilocycles, 1:30—Madison Ensemble. 2:00—Saturday Syncopators. 2:30—Columbia Salon Orchestra. 3:00—Round Towners. 3:30—Bells of St. Bostolphs, Boston, England. 4:15—Spanish Serenade. 4:30—Leon Belasco's Orchestra. 5:00—Columbia Miniatures. 5:15—Eddie Duchin’s Orchestra. 5:30—Skippy. 5:45—Kecping Up With Events,” by Robert W. Horton. 6:00—The Funnyborers. 6:15—Riviera Orchestra. 6:45—Do-Re-Mi_Trio, 7:00—"The Political Situation in Washington Tonight,” by Fred- eric William Wile. 7:15—Arthur Pryor’s Band. 7:45—The Magic Voice. 8:00—Abe Lyman’s Orchestra and Hollywood Newstoy. 8:15—Philadelphia Symphony chestra. 10:00—Morton Downey, tenor. 10:15—Columbia _In:iitute Affcirs; speaker, Henry Mor- genthau. 10:45—Vaughn de Leath. 11:00—Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians. 11:30—The Globe Trotter. 11:45—Harold Stern’s Orchestra. 12:00—Ted Ficrito’s Orchestra. 2 Stanley Smith and his 2,240 Pounds to the Ton Blue Ridge Va. Hard Stove Coal, $11.50 Special Furnace size, $10.50 Nut, §11.00 Pea, 88 Ecs. $11.00 Blue Ridge Buckwheat, $7.00 Above Coal Mined in Virginia Smokeless Egg,-$9.25 Bituminous Coal Without Smoke or Soet 80% Lump. $8. Blue Egg, $7.75 Hard-Structure Pa. Bituminous Make Only Thin White Smoke 75% Lun:-p Coal, $6.75 Prices May Advance Soon Better Order Now When coal can’t be put In by chute we carry it from truck to your bins: we do not_dump it on curb. Guarantee: you are not pleased with our coal after burning it 48 hours | we will take it back and refund sour money 3 Over 10000 New in3 Yrs in Baltimore Washinston There Is a Reason Why World’s Largest Retailers of Va. Anthracite BLUE RIDGE COAL CO. Miners of Virginia Anthracite Bard Coal Rd., So. Wi n, Va. Oppesite Texaco Wal. Distributing Plant 8475 -PRIZE o ‘; of Public Tila P ¢, Ba GERMAN CONGERT ON WISV TONIGH Eunice Norton to Be Guest Soloist on Philadelphia Symphony Program. Works of German composers will be featured by the Philadeiphia Symphony Orchestra in the seccnd of its series of concerts tonight over WJSV and other Columbia stations. Eunice Norton, young American pianist, will be the guest soloist. The orchestra will open its concert with a speclll version of Wagner's “Slegfried.” The other selections will be BStrauss’ tone poem, “Death and Transfiguration” and Hindemith's “Con- certo for Piano and Orchestra.” Leo- pold Stokowski will direct the orchestra. Morgenthau to Speak. Henry Morgenthau, former United States Ambassador to Turkey, will be the speaker in the Columbia Institute of Public Affairs program from 10:15 to 10:45. His topic is “Retrospect and Prospect.” Vaughn de Leath, contralto, will draw on the musical show “Americana” for the featured numkber of her recital at 10:45. It will be “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” She also will sing “Nothing Could Be Finer Than to Be in Carolina,” “Sweethearts Forever” and “Willow, Weep for Me.” Morton Downey, tenor, will sing the musical version of Joyce Kilmer's fa- mous poem, “Trees,” as the highlight of his program at 10 o'clock. His other selections include two sentimental mel- odies, “I Gave My Kiss to You” and “Till Tomorrow.” Frederic William Wile's weekly review of the political situation in Washington and a concert by Arthur Pryor’s Band are among WJSV's other outstanding Columbia attractions. Heywood Broun will interview George Chappell, explorer and author, during the Electric Circle program tonight over WRC and other N. B. C. Herbert-Halliday Program. In the variety hour from 10 to 11 Evelyn Herbert and Robert Halliday will present a prograri of gems from popular operettas. The selections in- clude “Look for the Silver Lining” from “Sally”; “Neapolitan Love Song,” from “Princess Pat”; “Only a Rose” from “Vagabond King”; “Enbraceable,” from “Girl Crazy”; “Best Things in Life Are Free” from “Hit the Deck,” and “Castle of Dreams,” from “Irene.” ‘The “Night Song” program from 11:30 to 12 will be presented by Lew White, organist, and the Trio Ro- mantique. ‘The National Advisory Council on Radio in Education presentation at 8:30 | will consist of an interview on “The Budget Problem.” In this period Phelps H. Adams, Washington newspaper cor- respondent, will discuss the subject with Henry P. Seideman, political economist. Jeno Sevely, Hungarian violinist, will give a recital tonight as a feature of the program of WMAL. This station’s other musical features will be provided by the Aristocrats of Melody, the Eve- ning Serenaders and Edwin Singer, bar- itone. The Aristocrats of Melody— Gretchen Hood, soprano, and Robert Frederick Freund, baritone—will sing “Nearest and Dearest.” Singer’s prin- cipal number will be “Just One Hour.” The Central Union Mission Glee Club will present another concert over WOL tonight from 8:30 to 9. The Silver String Revelers and the Nordica Man- dolin Orchestra also will contribute to the program. GIFT BOOKS SUGGESTED Suggestions for economical Christmas gifts are made in the December bulle- tin, “Your Library,” just published by | the Public Library, where they may be | obtained free, Dr. George F. Bowerman, | librarian, announced today. | A list of the books for Christmas pres- | entation to both adults and_children, | mentioned by Mrs. George F. Bower- man in two recent raido broadcasts | over Station WRC, also is available for | free distribution. | Tonight! Announcement of MAJOR | stations. American 0il Co. Slogan Contest WISV 7:150 Instead of regular time at 8:30 * Guest Star FANNIE Deliveries Anywhere BRIGE Famous Comedienne i * - ARTHUR PRYOR’S - AMERICAN OIL CO. BAND THE AMERICAN QUARTET Frederic William Wile, WJSV, 7:00; Morgen! |Ihjor]hdnl-'eatnn|| CLASSICAL. Symphon; Orchestra, :00. SPEECHES. ‘WRC, thau, WJSV, 10: VARIETY. Henry The Funnyboners, WJSV, 6:00; Arthur Pryor’'s Band, WJSV, 7:15; Evelyn Herbert and Robert Holliday, WRC, Hfgg: Theater Review, WMAL, DANCE MUSIC. Myer Davis’ Orchestra, WMAL, 11:00; Paul Whiteman's Orchestra, WRC, 12:00; Ted Fiorito’s Orchestra, WJSV, 12:00; Mark Fisher's Orches- tra, WRC, 12:30a. HIGH LIGHTS ELSEWHERE. 6:00—Little German Band; dialogue and songs—WJZ, WBZ, and WHAM. 6:30—"Laws That Safegudrd Society,” by Gleason L. Archer, dean of Suffolk Law School—WJZ, WBZ, ‘WBAL, WHAM and WJR. 7:30—“Cuckoo” program, with Ray- mond Knight—WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, WHAM and KDKA. 8:00—American Taxpayers’ League pro- gram, speaker, L. D. Staplen— WJzZ, WBZ, WBAL, WLS, WHAM and KDKA. 8:15—Anson Week's Orchestra—WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, WHAM, KDKA and WLW. 8:30—Road to Romany: gypsy music— WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, KDKA and WHAM. 9:00—"S.R.0.” comedy sketch—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and KDKA. 9:30—"The Mysterious Mummy Case,” drama—WJZ, WHAM, WBZ, KDKA and WLW. 10:00—liomay Bailey and Orchestra— WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, KDKA and WHAM. 10:30—The Buccaneers; vocal trio— WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and KDKA, 10:45—Program in commemoration of | the 135th anniversary of the birth of Jossph Henry—WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, KDKA and WHAM. 11:00—Pickens Sisters; Harmony Trio -Open Evenings Orchestra, dance music—WJZ, WREN, WBZ and KOIL ¢ “Y. W.” GIRL RESERVES WILL REPEAT PLAY “Why the Chimes Rang” Will Be Title of Offering at Barker Hall Cl Rang’ at 4 o'clock in Barker Hall, Seventeenth and K streets. The play will be given under the direction of Mrs. Alice Sig- ! worth \lorse, dramatic director, and| Miss urn director the Y. Wr.yc. A, s o Thirty-five members of the Girl Re- serves Glece Club and 37 members of the reserve grade school choir will sing carols for the play. The Girl Reserves will exhibit the! dolls that have been répaired and dressed this year in their clubrooms on | the sh;m floor of Barker Hall from 2 . m. tomorrow. Mrs. H. H. Bl Wwill be in charge of the exhibition, 5 Fishermen i Table Bay, South| Africa, recently found :nelyn;]ed“in their b nets :‘ mm-elfln; shark weighing Calendars and Diaries —when you say the word Store Hours, 8 A.M. to 5:30 P.M, E. Morrison Paper Co. Pa. Ave. Public Lecture, Sun., Dee. 18, 8:15 P.M. “The Meaning of Christmas” Questions and answers Study Class Thursday, 8:15 p.m. All Welcome Free Lending Library United Lodge of Theosophists 700 Hill Bdx.. 17th & Eye Sts. N.W. No Pees, Dues or Collections 11%; ATIO| e it ot 8:20 NI e, 0 B 24 Play American Theater Society vielet HEMING xocer PRYOR in Jobn Van Draten’s Comedy Hit THERE'S ALWAYS JULIET ¥ GEORGE RAFT | consTANCE CummInes | wnne cigson-mae West MiLLs KORK CMARTY 0AVIS n b gasge THEATRE OF TE STAR e ViNg DELMAR'S s PUPTOWN NEW YORK’| Now Showing GEORGE RAFT in_“Under-Cover Men* With Nancy Carroll —0! G it : & OTHER IB. ‘SCARLET DAWN" Added—Complete Game NOTRE DAML Vs, U. S. CALIFORNIA “THE UXARITTEN LAW" Greta 'n_ Mary Brisa Lew Nkeets Gallagher Added “The Devils’ Rope” _ Buy RKO Thrift BooLs for Christmas PHiLssz:? DEC. 20, 8:45 it LEOPOLD STOKOWSKI, Conducting, WAGNER—"Siegfried.” SIBELIUS—"The Tempest.” STRAWINSK SINGLE_TICKETS: $3. L $1.50, §1. at T. Arth 1330 G st., in Homer L. Kitt. Our 60 Varieties made according to the FAMOUS FANNIE MAY RECIPES and endorsed by lead- ing Culinary Authorities as AMERICA’S MOST DELICIOUS AND HEALTHFUL HOME- MADE CANDIES. Candy Mailed Everywhere—Insured Free Fannie May Candy Shops 1010 E St. N.W. 3305 14th St. N.W. 1406 N. Y. Ave. N.W. 1704 Pa. Ave. N.W. 1354 F St. N.W. Quality Controlled from “Cow to Counter” Winner of Over 500 Prizes Every step in the process of making this delicious sweet cream butter is as exacting as it is possible to make it. Carefully selected herds of the finest cows supply the cream that is used. Clean, modern sanitary dairies, equipped with time and labor saving machinery, and under the careful supervision of ex- perienced dairymen, make this better, pure butter for your table. Our field men travel thousands of miles every year checking up on the quality and methods used by our buttermakers. Definite strict quality standards are set, and they must be carried out. Not figuratively, but actually, Louella Sweet Cream Butter is Quality Controlled from *“Cow to Counter”. The Finest Sweet Cream Butter in America Thousands of particular people use Louella regularly, and you will, too, once you try it. Bay All Yoar Food Needs in the Steres Where Quality Counts and Yoar Money Goes Furthest. ; "ORES ¢ FITL R IG EO. | "ol Wiscon<in Ave. GREEN_and ITTLE ORPHAN C_ LIN NNIE.”_Comedy. | FAIRLAWN __“COME ON DANGER |LYRIC ,op GAITHTES E. BROWN YOU L “Last Frontier.” 10th, _Jack_Denny. TIM McCOY, in _ Laurel and_Hardy Comeav__Sers STANTON s0t&, =zd €75 Finest Sound Eauij BUCK JONES in “HELLO TROUBLE WTHE HURRICANE EXPRESS.” STATE BETHESDA. WMD. Home of Western Electric Sound Double Feature_BILL BOYD in “CARNIVAL BOAT™" 'TOM MI TEXAS BAD MAN.*_Cartoon. Matinee 1:50. TAKOMA *i& 2 Buticrnut sis. No_ Parking Troubles \ FICHARD CROMWELL - THAT BOY TOM MIX in “HIDDEN GOLD" ent Also Episode | Tom “miown, | Pegey_Shann MEO Rose Hoba: » | ARCAD O | Tom Mix, - 82 | Helen Twelvetrees. F &5 | RICHMOND RoCRYILL Z! 2. &l 3. AMBASSADOR _c.'*i.* “OLD DARK HOUS AVALON im0 %% o “MOST DANGEROUS GAME. JOI CHARLIE CHAPL | _coMEDY. | AVENUE GRAND “ALL AMERICAN ‘—Y:E.NV I VRAAV'E“SI 7 "7 N’Y'n.,inr? & Farragut St OLO LIFETIME,” JACK “ONCE 1IN A __OAKIE. SIDNEY FOX. CARTOON. Hom‘fififm&o C si. “CROOKED CIRCI )Y 1iih St. & Col. Rd. |SAVOY GEO. M, COHAN. | JIMMY DURANTE. “PHANTOM PRESIDENT.” = COM< EDY. 3 W. fivou 1ith St. & Park Rd. LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE" MITZI SSE, O SR, 5 WARNER BROS. THEATERS -Y-afl*mfi.@'sfiw. “MADISON SQUARE GARDEN." JACK | "QAKIE. EDGAR KENNEDY COM- C. A ROWN 1 E! | JOHN MACK' B! n ISHING FRONTIER. = LD. Se! LEW AYERS and MAUREEN LIVAN in “OKAY AMERICA. You Will Find Lactobacillus (L-A) Acidophilus a Great Help It is one of the most efficacious ways oy Wy P ey, m| 4 many forms of colitis. rhe: aches, ete. Your doctor use of \C1!