Evening Star Newspaper, January 5, 1933, Page 7

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Ay v] THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1933. — W|FE UF BANKER e e e | suing free rides only to officers, em- | Navy Dentist Dies, Actual Workers. other roads was eliminated. of the Dental Corps of the United miles long, between Heisingfors and | destroyer base here for two years He use of sake, the nationl rice spirit, in preicsimedii London has charity dog auctions. | The dozen major lines operating!try from other parts of Europe World War. PIONEERING BRITISH AVIATOR I DRYS ACTIVE IN JAPAN |mony. At the point in the rites where | END COURTESY PASSES | through Kansas City started 1933 by i- _— vows, the Japanese bride and groom ex- | B — ployes, company attorneys and surgeons| SAN DIEGO, Calif., January 5 (P).— e di- | change little bowls of sake. | i : - wia ety 4 4 18 TO LEAD MT EVERES 1 FLIGH’I’ Would End Use of Seke in Tradi- | change litle bowls of sake. =~ |Many Railroads Limit Issuance to o devote subs tantially all thelr tme | Lieut. Comdr. Willlam T. Davidson, 40, | tional Weddings. iw]h-:1 mll'u Jndveru.sed :gdfm first non- | ‘ i @ 3 TOKIO (#)—Prohibition advocates | Sicoholic _Japanese wedding ceremony.| o ,veas crry. s A e mape States Navy, died of heart disease Tues= BEBUMES SPEAKER‘A' C d P. F. M. Fell in Japan have sterted s movement|yeio 57, B8 Toxlo headquarters of the| EANSES CETY, MY S Y| Pinland wil buld a highway 1050|dey. He had been statiomed at the | fA1r ommodore . . . ellowes 10 |against what they consider one of the Custams and Morals. | greatest obstacles to ,their cause, the : ;p“"":‘“t‘;_:’"m"”m":mu”;h'z been | Ao, the principal port through which | was a survivor of the rrrp]edo;ng‘:{ the . restric lo the worl railre ler. it of the traffic 0 the - op ship P L the Replace Marquis of Clydesdale as the traditional Japanese wedding cere- ‘ ajor lnes op By from other el L T e i May Be First of Sex to Hold State Post in U. S. By the Assoclated Press. BISMARCK, N. Dak, January 5.—A small-town banker’s wife, interested in music and flowers as well as politics, became the first woman Speaker of the State House of Representatives Tuesday. Mrs. Minnie D. Craig of Esmond, prominent in State Republican circles and a member of the Legislature 10 vears, was elected presiding officer as the lawmakers began their biennial session. Friends of the middle-aged woman, given & unanimous ballot after a male Democratic rival received scattered votes, looked about to see whether they -night claim for her the honor of being Yhe first or only one of her sex in the Nation to hold such an office. G. 0. P. Committeewoman. She was national Republican com- mitteewoman for the State in 1928-32, and in 1928 directed her party's cam- | paign among North Dakota women. | North Dakota Republicani At Esmond, a community of 300 per- sons, her husband left his bank yes- | terday to come here and see her sworn in to office. They have lived at Esmond since their wedding 25 years ago. Mrs. | Craig was a school board member there 13 years. A native of Maine, she studied piano and voice in Boston before coming West. | She has let her music go somewhat into the discard, but enjoys concerts by others, | Likes Flower Garden. | Home in Esmond she spends Sum- mers developing a flower garden which she likes “nearly as well as politics.” All phases of government and poli- | tics interest her. i In nominating Mrs. Craig, Represent- | ative Herbert Swett said he believed her election would be “an encouragement to women all over the world to step out and achieve political honors. “Too often we think of women as cooks and helpmates, but under the ~ew order of things women are begin- ing to play a larger part in the world c: politics,” he added PENNSY SEEKS TO STOP 13-MILE RAILROAD LINK Asks Against Completion of Line to Steel District. Permanent Injunction By the Assoclated Press. | BEAVER, Pa, January 5—A new| legal barrier to the completion of a 13- mile link between the Youngstown steel district and the Ohio River was sought | here. The Pennsylvania Railroad filed ap- plication for a permanent injunction to restrain the Pittsburgh Coal Co. from | continuing dredging operations in Beaver Creek, a part of the project for | a river-rail terminal for the Montour | Railroad, controlled by Pittsburgh in- terests. | Hearing on the application was set for tomorrow. | The railroad branch from Negl Ohio, to Smiths Ferry, Pa., is now un: der construction. Action on an appli-'| cation for an injunction against the Montour and Pitisburgh coal interests is ]!;m; pending in Federal Court in Cleve- | nd. IRISH TO PARTICIPATE | IN CHICAGO EXPOSITION Free State Official Announces Plans for Taking Part in Fair. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, January 5. — The Irish Fre State yesterday officially announced it would participate in the Century of Progress Exposition which begins in June. Fair officials received the infor- mation from W. J. B. Macaulay, consul general of the Irish Free State in New York. Macauley visited exposition head- quarters several weeks ago and recom- mended 2n_ exhibit- of ancient Irish culture and modern Irish industrial development. Expedition Commander. | Sectal Dispatch to The Star. 1 LONDON, January 5 (N.AN.A)—A | change has been made in the personnel | of the expedition which ™ill attempt to | fiy over Mount Everest early this year. | The leadership had been provisionally held by the Marquis of Clydesdale. Now Air_Commodore P. F. M. Fellowes, | D. 8. O, is announced as leader. | Lord Clydesdale, however, will pilot the first plane which will attempt the flight over the highest mountain in the world. Air Commodore Fellowes was ; sclected to command owing to his wide | experience in flying over unknown or little known countries, and to his knowl- | edge of the organization of flylng units. | During three years of service in the Middle East, Commodore Fellowes gained much experience of conditions in which aircraft, operate in mountain- ous countries. He has @lso taken a share in pioneer expeditions. In 1921 he commanded the expedition which surveyed and established the air route between Aman, in Trans-Jordania, and Ramadieh, in Irak. HOW TO STOP A COLD QUICK AS YOU CAUGHT IT A New Method Doctors Everywhere Are Advising FOLLOW DIRECTIONS PICTURED BELOW Take 1 or 2 Bayer Aspirin Tablets. Almost Instant Relief In This Way If you have a cold—don’t take chances with ‘‘cold killers” and nostrums. A cold is too dangerous to take chances on. The simple method pictured above is the way doctors through- out the world now treat golds. It is recognized as the QUICK- EST, safest, surest way. For it will check an ordinary cold almost as fast as you caught it. That is because the real BAYER Aspirin embodies certain medical qualities that strike at the base of a cold almost INSTANTLY. You can combat nearly any cold you get simply by taking BAYER Aspirin and drinking plenty of water every 2 to 4 hours the first day and 3 or 4 times daily there- after. If throat is sore, gargle with 3 BAYER Aspirin Tablets crushed Take another 1001( MI‘.BUSiIlCSSHlaIl./ Do you know how many people there are at the other end of the line who are at this moment reading your advertisements ? Do you keep your telephone door always open? Do you invite your customers to enter by this door? You can do this by keeping your tele- phone number constantly before them in your advertising. On your your bills. stationery. On Tell your customers how welcome they are to come to your store by telephone. Tell them again and again. It will bring results that may surprise you. In this way your telephone will be worth more to you, for it is one of those things ks the whose value grows with use. Drink Full Glass of , Water. He began- his service in the royal| navy and was transferred to the royal | naval air service in 1915. He was twice | decorated during the war, gnd an ex-| ploit which gained him a bar to his| distinguished service order was one of | the most courageous on record. May 28, | 1918, he flew over the lock gates at Zee- | brugeg and from a height of only 200 | feet dropped a 230-pound bomb on the | gates. He was shortly afterward wounded and taken prisoner. (Zopyright, by North American News- Alliance. Inc.) Coffee Export Tax Removed. RIO DE JANEIRO, January 5 (#).— The tax burden on Sao Paulo coffee was lightened when a decree be- came effective removing the state ex- port tax of 145 milreis (approximately | $1) a sack. A commission which has been studying state finances recom- mended the measure which helps meet foreign competition and follows a recent deduction in the federal export tax. If throat is sore, crush and dissolpe 3 Bayer Aspirin Tablets in a half glass of warm water and gargle accord- ing to directions. and dissolved in a half glass of warm water, repeating every 2 or | 3 hours as necessary. Sore throat eases this way in a few minutes, in- credible as this may seem. Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, see that you get the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets. They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Gen- uine Bayer Aspirin Tablets dis- solve wif sufficient speed and completeness, leaving no irritating particles or grittiness. Get a box of 12 or bottle of 100 at any drugstore. The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company 933 13th Street N. W, (Bell Systgm) ME tropolitan 9900 BELL 91 We're going after | customers with our % This sale will run a LIMITED time only! * NO Charges for Alterations! i g | BELL DROPS ALL IDEA OF PROFIT DURING THEIR FIRST SALE to stimulate immediate business . . . to keep our shops busy and our employes at work and to introduce BELL Clothes to 10,000 new customers. Thousands of fine Suits, Topcoats, Overcoats and Tuxedos have been reduced to one low price, $14.85, and that’s some- thing for all you thrifty, thinking men to consider in view of the fact that BELL CLOTHES ARE ALWAYS TAILORED TO A QUALITY STANDARD THAT SATISFIES MEN ACCUSTOMED TO WEARING $30 AND $35 CLOTHIN Come in and examine these clothes carefully . .. You'll see the finest woolens that money can buy . . . skillfully hand tailored at 24 points . . . and if you don't honestly believe that they are the BEST . . . the FINEST Clothes Values EVER OFFERED ANYWHERE . . . walk out. But if we've learned anything in our 16 years of business, we've missed our guess when we say, “You won't be able to resist buying a garment or two, even if you don’t need clothes at this time.” 5 REMEMBER, this is our FIRST SALE, and $14.85 IS POSITIVELY THE LOWEST PRICE AT WHICH BELL CLOTHES HAVE EVER BEEN OFFERED. < 6 FST. - 941 PA AVE.- 121 147 ST, OTHE

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