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SALE Monday Only 4PM—-8PM. - COMPLETE DINNER (§1.00 Value) 50c Chaoice Broiled Lamp Chops, Butter Sauce I or ‘ Roast Prime Ribs of Beef au Jus WALLIS’ 617 12th St. N.W. UPRIGHTS e~ AND ~- MIDGET PIANOS FOR RENT HUGO WORCH 1110 G. EST.1819 PHILCO JUNIOR RADIO SCARF & TABLE |PRESERVING HOMES GRANDS | CONFERENGE TOPIC Baptist Session Will Map| Plans to Avert Threat During Depression. Plans for preserving the structure of American homes threatened by the de- pression will be discussed at a confer- ence ‘to be held at Calvary Baptist Church January 11 under auspices of the Social Service Committee of the | | Federation of Churches. ¢ Among the organizations which will participate are the Council of Social | Agencies. the Social Hygiene Society, | the Christian Associations and the Par- ent-Teacher Association. Prof. D. W. Willard of the department of sociology, George Washington University, i chair- man of the committee in charge. Among the speakers will be Dr. L. Foster Wood, chairman of the Commit- tee on Marriage and the Home of the Federal Council of Churches, and Prof, E. R. Groves of the University of North Carolina. Simultaneous morning sessions will be held, one for ministers and the other | for women. They will be followed by a luncheon for all persons interested in the session. At night there will be three addresses and a forum discussion. The General Committee on Arrange- ments is headed by Rev. Harvey Baker | | Smith and includes Dr. W. Sinclair | i Bowen, Miss Beatrice Clephane, Rev. R. J. Clinchy, Mrs. William J. Cooper, Miss Mary E. Coulson. Mrs. Bertha W. Eldred, Page McK. Etchison, Ray H. | Everett, Mrs. H. Wellen Fisher, Mrs. | | I W. Ketchum, Mrs. G. C. Leach. Mrs. W. A. Roberts, Mrs. Joseph Sanders. Mrs. Willam_A. Slade, Mrs. Elwood Street, Rev. Charles T. Warner. Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley. Prof. D. W. Willard R. Thomas | Miss Miss Virginia Wingfield. Mrs West, Mrs. Elizabeth W. Murr: ! Anne Rogers and Dr. W. L. Darl | *"Fhe Ministerial Union has appointed | ating_committee composed of | vard Goeiz. Rev. H. A, Kister. | Rev. Willlam Pierpont. Rev. R. Paul Schearer and Rev. N. M. Simmonds. INSTRUC;ORS TO MEET National Council of Geography Convenes Here December 26. The Nation's leading instructors in the various phases of geography are expected to meet in the National Cap- ital December 26-27 for the nineteenth annual meeting of the National Coun- cil of Geography, it was announced last ta co-op: A | erate, THE SUNDAY Senators Study PLAN FOR CONFERENCE ON WANDERING YOUTHS. Left to right: PRIVATE conference was J'leld“ yvesterday by Senator Walter F. | George of Georgia and Senator | Hattie Caraway of Arkansas, | . prepafatory to launching a se- | ries of open meetings with Southem‘ members of Congress on the question of how to stop the Winter migration of | homeless boys to the Southern States. | Mrs. Margaret Ford, director of the | Washington _Travelers' Aid, explained | to the two Senators the results of her recent trip South, when she was called | by the boards of public welfare of vari- | ous Southern States to aid them in| working out their problems with the boy wanderers. Public resources, she | said, are being severcly taxed to provide food and shelter for the streams of boys pouring into the South. “I found public and private charita- ble agencies almost desperate from try- ing to find adeguate means to provide for these homeless boys, who are now swarming all through the South.” said Mrs. Ford. “If members of Congress from the Southern States will co-op-| as they have pledged to do. with | Travelers' Aids and other *welfare or- ganizations, we shall be able to finance | the work with these boys and help them STAR, Senator Walter F. George of Georgla, Mrs. Ford, director of the Washington Travelers' Aid; Zita Louise Baker, Washington writer, and Senator Hattie Caraway of Arkansas. ‘ WASHINGTON, 15 DAYS IN JAIL GIVEN PAIR SOLICITING ALMS: Police Charge Money Asked for Truck Repair by Men Showing Ex-Service Certificates. Samuel Niccoli, 34, and “Captain” Alexander, 36, colored, Cleveland bonus marchers, yesterday were sent to jail for 15 days in default of $15 fines im- posed by Judge Isaac R. Hitt in Police Court. They were found guilty of so- liciting alms. The men were arrested Friday on Pennsylvania_avenue, near_the Capitol grounds by Policemen H. E. Anderson and L. S. Wise, whom they asked for money with which to buy gasoline and repair a truck. The men exhibited a letter from the Veterans Central Rank and File Com- mittee certifying they were bona fide ex-service men. John Elliott, leader of the Cleveland .bouus marchers, told the court the men | were asking for funds to repair a truck to take the delegation home. He pleaded | that they be permitted to return to their homes. Boy Problem ASSIéNED TO.INFANTRY |Col. Persons Will Command 20th at Fort Benning. ‘Margaret | i | _Prom command of an Army transport Star Staff Photo. | . 1 OO O reohs will Tesort for canrot help but develop a crime wave | duty at Fort Benning. Ga. on Febru- through the South this Winter. We ary 28 to command the 29th &nfantry, must ‘meet our responsibility to these | the crack regiment of the Army. boys, or else we shall pay the penalty.”| Col. Persons has commanded the “Re- o e | public” on its voyages from New York | to the Philippines and will succeed at | PROGRAM FOR VETERANS |Fort Benning Col. John J. Toffy, who = | is to become instructor in the New | Jersey National Guard. The Army In- | American Legion Party Will Be| fantry School is stationed a. the North |* it | Carolina post. The American Legion Christmas radio | pour thousand children attended a party for disabled veterans in Govern- meeting of the Pioneer Total Absti- ment hospitals will be broadcast from | nNence Association of the Sacred Heart 3 to 4 pm. next Sunday over Station | ‘1 Dublin, Irish Free State, recently. WOL. The station will lend several of its entertainers to the pro which will include the following speakers: Dept Comdr. Norman B. Landreau, Capt. Watson B. Miller, Representative Ran- kin of Mississippl. and Gen. Frank T. Hines, administrator of veterans' af- fairs. RECRUITING RESUMED DINNER MUSIC DANCING Table Service—12 to 8 P.M. No Cover Charge No Tipping Fruit Cocktail, Tomato Juice. Beef Con- C }to get readjusted to normal ways of 25 Men Needed for Walter Reed living.” | i | | Mrs_Ford declared that this Winter | Hospital Corps. | | all indications are that there will be| Recruiting has been resumed | about twice as many boys in the South | vacancies mgm.- Hospital Corps sl.t%v;?ll} | | as at any previous time. She said that | ter Reed Hospital. Twenty-five addi- | welfare officials in both large and small | tional men, between the ages of 18 and Southern communities were positively | 35 will be recruited to bring the de- appalled at the influx of transient ! tachment up to its newly authorized Special Luncheon G Orchestra Music Evers Day—6 t CREYNOLD'S D. C., DECEMBER 18, 1932—PART ONE. $100 FINE FOLLOWS 10-MILE CAR CHASE| Police Estimate Youth Drove Through 15 Red Lights. Liquor Charges Pend. Captured after a 10-mile chase through heavy traffic, during which po- lice estimated he ran through 15 red lights, Belford R. Lo genecker, 18, 300 block of Channing street northeast, was fined $100 in Police Court yesterday. Police reported finding 100 quarts of liquor in the machine, and a charge of tml;!‘?omtlnn ‘was continued until Wed- nesday. Pvt. George Deyo, police driver, sald the chase began at Thirteenth and T streets about 7 o'clock. During the chase he estimated the liquor car at- tained a speed of 50 miles an hour. He said on a number of occasions it was nearly wrecked. The officer said the youth drove almost entirely around Thomas Circle on red lights. The chase ended at Seventh and T streets, where Longenecker and an un- identified companion who escaped leaped from the machine and ran. The youth was overtaken after a six-block foot race. Longenecker faced seven traffic charges, including five accusations of passing signals, one of speeding and an- other of failing to exhibit his registra- tion card. WATCH REPAIRING BY EXPERTS The repair of your watch does mot complete the trans- action between us, but estab- lishes our obligation to fulfill our guarantee of service. Al Parts Used in Our_ Repsir Department Are Genuine Material BURNSTINE’S 927 G St. N.W. DIAMONDS ATCHES SINCE 1866, ‘ ‘e AFTERNOON—EVENING—NIGAT 153 HOURS WASRINGTON to FLORIDA Via the Double Track-Sea Level Route FROM WASHINGTON DAILY The Miamian Gulf Coast Limited Florida Ly.3.20PM. Lv.320 P.M. SHIP YOUR AUTO—NEW LOW RATES GEO.P. JAMES, G.P.A., 1418 (- Street. MW e Mational 7835 Lv. 745 P. M. E Goasku L uagske 18-dey roundtrip tickes s0id daily 10 all Florida points st approzimetaiy 50 per cont Teducnion. HARRIS, 1010 H ST. N Philco Majestic Atwater Kent GUARANTEED Tke largest stock of used radios in the city. ALL FAMOUS MAKES. Cabinets and midgets, complete with tubes. 30-day free trial. _rs HARRIS Free service. Free installation. CO. ¢ 1010 H Street N.E. Linc. 8391 Open Nites —inost appropriate —most appreciated night by the Greater National Capital | youth, with apparently no destination in | stzength. Committee. Sessions will be held at| view, except to keep away from the —Applicants will be received for the C. F. Harper NATIONAL MAJESTIC RADIO & ELECTRIC CO. 801 12th St. N.W. EISEMAN’S SEVENTH AND F SUITS ‘18 NOTHING DOWN Just Pay $6 IN JANUARY $6 IN FEBRUARY $6 IN MARCH For your own satisfaction SEE these Suits. vourself what remarkable See for values they are at $18. We have sold hundreds of them this Fall. Every purchaser is pleased. Come in tomorrow— selection. make your Open a charge account, NOTHING DOWN— just pay monthly, starting next January. l OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS $6 the Shoreham Hotel. The program inciudes addresses by | Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor. president of the National Geographic Society: R. S. Pat ton of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, and J. B. Kincer. United States | ‘Weather Bureau. The meeting will| close with a_dinner at which the| Speaker will be Dr. Maynard Owen| Williams. AAESAEY = Lakes Shipping Veteran Dies. ASHTABULA, Ohio. December 17 (#)—Capt. Thomas T. Heyman, 60, master of the Marquette Bessemer Car Ferry No. 2 and a weli known figure in | Great Lakes marine circles, died ves- | terday of heart disease, it was learncd today. \ “HUCKLEBERRY FIM ‘HE dramatization of Mark Twain's immortal story, “Huckleberry Finn, “while it is not so exciting as the book when read in the proper juvenile hey-day, is nevertheless welcome entertainment and the kind of thing that suits admirably a young audience. Yesterday morning the National Theater was full of young ladies and gentlemen who clamored to be admitted to this production, presented by Clare Tree Major's Children’s Theater of New York, in spite of a snowstorm that ordinarily would have kept many mothers at home. Mothers and their offspring, how- ever, were there in abundance—and Joud were the laughs when Juliet cried “Wherefore art thou, Romeo” in & blaring basso, and fell in a heap (in her somewhat rustic Juliettian garments) at the feet of Romeo. The further adventures of Huck on the island were similarly rewarded with cheers and hoop-las, and the actors themselves did so well as to keep their audience in a state of | The Theate i continued enjoyment. Robert Josselyn, who played the title role, was the nearest replica to our imagination's Huck we have ever seen. John M. O’'Connor was a fine Nigger Jim, stealing perhaps a good half of the acting honors. Others who stood out were Will Marsh as the King, Allen Mathes as the duke and Josie Heather, Phyllis White, Philippa Bevans and Alan Marks in lesser roles. This series of plays for children is being sponsored hére by the Wom- en’s International League. The plays are well worth attending. E de 5. M. | Northern cold weather. “We think we have a problem with | hese boys up here” Mrs. Ford added, but it is small compared with the sit- uation in the South at this time of year. Only those from the South, or who have been down there to investigate matters, can realize the extent of the demands made upon welfare agencies by these | constantly traveling youngsters. Unless something is done to ease things, there | l HEFFRON C i | eaminG, | 20L5NE PLUMBING & HEATING Mrs. McCarty’s 60c Lb. Homemade CANDIES NOwW Choose 45 delicious va- rieties. p Butter Creams. Bonbons, Nut Clusters, Al- monds. Cherries and _other deli- cious centers. Made fresh daily right here in Washington. Mrs. McCarty's National Theater Candy Shop 1317 E St. N.W. CALENDARS Formerly $7.50 Any old pen is worth $5.50 as part payment on one of these $7.50 Chilton Fountain Pens. Holds dou- ble ink capacity, fully guar- anteed, neatly boxed for gift giving. BY MAIE, 10c EXTRA Sale Chilton Pens P 5 e e B 2 Choice of Historical Art, Catholic and Scripture Text Calendars—neatly designed and complete in every detail. Send one to a friend or buy one for your own use. D For Your Tree Tree Lights.....39¢ Outside Lights..98c FREE ! With every set of lis! sold we will give “Flashette” _plug .00 | next two weeks at the hospital recruit- 709 18th St. N.W. ing office. ‘1&‘%‘&’6&&%26&‘&‘&’4&‘#3&@&‘4&’;&2 | HOLIDAY SPECIAL | American Radiator HOT-WATER HEATING SYSTEM No interference the present heating plant while our installa- tion is being made. ey N > COMPLETELY INSTALLED 5-YEAR GUARANTEE NO MONEY DOWN FIRST PAYMENT FEBRUARY 1st, 1933 From 1 to 3 Years to Pay Ask us to furnish you with further details of this hot-water heating, consisting of 300 sq. ft. as Christmas Gifts The three assortments of gifts illustrated are really the “leaders” in the way of fine gifts of jewelry. We know of no other gifts which are as popular, or as much appreciated as Diamonds, Watches or Silver. Then, too, our assortments are so complete as to give you the widest choice of either gift you may wish to purchase. A beautiful One-Third-Carat Diamond set in a SOLID PLATINUM MOUNTING and surrounded by 12 smaller Diamonds, making a delight- ful effect. of radiation and 18-inch boiler. Telephone Inquiries Given Prompt Attention 1420 K STREET N.W. fesmspamemamam ez grererineref OPEN EVENINGS |y Kitt's Amazing XMAS OFFER 3 Apartment GRANDS S PG T g S o e S e oy St e ¢ v e i i i We've selected these three grands and priced them ex- tremely low—just for the few Player Piano 390 Free bench and free music rolls—a fine musfcal instrument for the home at a ridiculous price. that makes the lights blink on and off. Tree Mat in Ol Ereen felt. Fitty-four inches sauare to pro- tect oor and earpet 98¢ Tree Ornaments 25c and 49c Dozen AND YOUR OLD PEN GARRISON'’S The House of Novelties Open Evenings Till 10 P.M. RADIOS *9-*12-*15 31 8' and up “THE Complete Music Store” HIEY SN B3 1003 S D D 03 0V BV Y ) ) ) 0D D D Y 0 D D D 1 MOV 0D ) Y Y Y Y Y ) S D D A AV AV MY AP | | % § i : $50 A SOLID PLATINUM WED- DING BAND set with 15 bril- liant-cut Diamonds in Chanel effect. This design has been extremely popular this year. An exquisite PLATINUM BAGUETTE set with 20 bril- lant-cut ~Diamonds. movement is 17-jewel, guaranteed. A fine ti keeper. A _Three-Quarters-Carat PER- FECT DIAMOND set in a modern _design of SOLID PLATINUM and surrounded by 10wmaller Diamonds. Very Ladies’ 15-Jewel ELGIN WRIST WATCH of rec- tangular shape. The case is 14-kt. white gold. $40 MAN'S HAMILTON WATCH. 17-Jewel Ham- ilton, radium dial, white or green gold filled. Choice of several styles. Men’s 15-jewel GRUEN with metal band attached. A fine timepiece, LADY'’S GRUEN WRIST ‘WATCH. 14-kt. gold case, 15-jewel movement, metal Jband attached. Sterling Teaspoans. half dozen..... 87'50 $17.00 $19.00 Dessert Spoons, half dozen Medium Knives, half dozen Graceful Fairfax Sterling Teaspoons, half dozen.. $6.50 _ $18.00 $15.00 Dessert Knives, half dozen. . Dessert Forks, half dozen. The Modern Debutante Sterling Teaspoons, half dozen Dessert Spoons, half dozen.... Dessert Knives, half dozen.... Other Patterns Louis XIV, Reflection, La Rochelle, Shamrock V, Dolly Madison, Chased Diana, Contempora, Or- chid, Oxford, Minuet, Col- fax and Symphony. This Dudley MASONIC WATCH A Thrilling Gift for the “Mason” LLY MADE L FOR $180 LATER REDUCED TO $125 20 LIMITED QUANTITY 52 Exactly as illustrated. . .the working tools of Masonry are represented in the movement, making this watch an outstanding of any “Mason.” ))osse:sion It is a splendid timekeeper and is thoroughly guaranteed. The price re- duction is most extraordinary! EXCLUSIVE IN WASHINGTON AT OUR STORE STATIONERS PLATINUMSMITHS A.Kahn Jnc. Arthur J. Sundlun, President 40 YEARS AT 935 F STREET N.W,