Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1933, Page 6

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108 1 0r 2159 GREAT EASTERN TERMINAL 11349 “E’ ST., N.W. (Cor. Pennsylvania & 14th 5t.) 'Or—GREAT EASTERN BUS TER" /214 6THST., N.W. 5258 GREAT EASTERN -~ e — bus system MAKES WOMEN| LOSE FAT Rea M. Haines of Dayton. Ohlo. Tee: ™% wiighed 180, so. siarted s To take off fat—take one-hall teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a | glass of hot water in the morning hefore breakfast—one bottle that lasts 4 wecks costs but a few cents —get it at any drug store in Amer- fca. 1If this first bottle fails to con- vince vou this is_the SAFE and harmless way to lose fat — your money gladly returned Don't accept anything but Kruschen because you must reduce —Advertisement. Kept Awake At Night by Pimples Healed by Cuticura “My trouble began when I was about sixteen years of age. Pimples brokeouton my forehead and cheeks and were hard and red. They were. quite itchy at times and burned when 1 squeezed them. When I scratched them they irritated more than ever, and used to keep me awake at night. The trouble was continuous for about & year and a half. “‘Iread an advertisement for Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample of each, Later purchased . more and in about two montbs I was completely healed.” | (Signed) Miss F. Sano, 58 Church St., Lynn, Mass., Sept. 9, 1931. le treatment for the skin and hair, Cuticura Tal- cum is fragrant and refreshing. Soap 35e. Ointment 38 and e, Taleam t5e. Sold D st Dipt ¥, M, St DANDRUFF | ! | I | Soon Destroys. the Hair If you want ‘?lenty of thick, beau- tiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will "‘:;‘rveyp‘nhflr and ruin it if you . It doesn't do much good to try to | or wash it out. The only| sure way to get rid of dandruff is |to dissolve it, then you destroy it | | entirely. To do this, get plain ordi- | | nary liquid arvon; apply it at night | when retiring; use enough to mois- |mn the scalp and rub it with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of | your dandruff will be gone, and two | or three more applications will com~ | | pletely dissolve and entirely destroy | every single sign and trace of it. | You will find, too, that all itching {and digging of the scalp will stop, | and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get | liquid arvon at any drug store. It won't. cost you more than thirty- | fice cents (35c). Not matter how much dandruff you have, this simple | remedy never fails.—Advertisement. I Don’t take calomel! HERE'S NEW HEALTH FOR YOUR LIVER Now banish bad breath, pimple: constipation; feel like a million! ‘That tired, frow morning, that “da the mouth—if you and win back buoyant health, don't expect relief from salts, mineral oil, or candy and chewing-gum laxatives. For such remedies only move the bowels. While chances are, you're one of the thousands suffering from slug- gish liver which does not yield suffi- cient bile—causing pimples, blemishes, feeling in the rown” taste in headaches, bad breath and a general run-down feeling. ‘What you need is something which acts _thoroughly but harmlessly upon the liver. And in Dr. Edwards Olive ‘Tablets you will find that “something,” which stimulates the bile flow A successful substitute for calomel, these famous tablets are compounded | of pure vegetable ingredients, and have been praised for years by millions To get and keep the bile flowing freely—correcting constipation, skin ubles, and win back that “fine-and- feeling of ,youth—go to your druggist for Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets today. 15c, 30c, 60c.—Advertisement. COLDS ARE NOW ould banish them | *KENTPLAN” TOAD| TRABE 1S OUTLINED Proposaln Made by R. F. C. President Would Step Up Output to 1927 Level. | By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, January 10.—The Fred I. Kent plan for economic recovery, de- scribed yesterday in Washington by C. A. Miller, president of the Reconstruc- tion Finance Corporation, as one that “comes nearest to solution” of present conditions, calls for resumption of in- dustrial operations on the scale pre- vailing in 1927. Any losses that might be sustained by industry in stepping up production to 1927 levels would be met by the | Pederal Government. The plan, as outlined in a report of | the Commerce and Marine Commission of the American Bankers' Association, of which Kent was chairman, would be prosecuted through the R. F. C., with | banks throughout the cuuntry acting as |-agents, | The individual banks would canvass | théir industrial clients for information | as to how much money they would need | to resume operation on a 1927 scale, | how many workers would be re-em- | ployed, how much more raw material would be purchased. and the character and quantity of the increased pro-! | duction. Data Co-ordinated by R. F. C. | This information would be co-ordin- ated, through the Federal Reserve banks, by the Reconstruction Corpora- tion. Armed with the data, which would give it a composite picture of industrial conditions throughout the v, the corporation ‘then wbuld isable to do so, and if authority. were obtained from .| Congress, the corporation would proceed to direct the banks to make loans to their industrial clients, with a guar- antee against loss “for such proportion of the loan as was not covered by the sale of the increased production.” “Each loan made would carry an agreement on the part of the borrower,” the report said, “to employ a certain specified number of additional men, to buy raw materials necessary to produce its regular products and to pay the loan at maturity, provided such prod- ucts were sold at prices sufficient to cover the cost. Further, that in liew of the insurance to the industry carried in the guarantee of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, the borrower would pay the corporation 50 per cent of any tgrmu that his company might make through the sale of the pro- duction. * B “Before any loan was undertaken the method of accounting would be agreed upon between the industry and its banks acting under’ instructions from the corporation. This would be feasi- ble as was proved during the war when the Government made arrangements to 'y cost plus for production. The e le for unt with the Federal Reserve Banks. Consequently it is scarcely to be expected that the corporation would be compelled to ad- vance any funds except in a very small way in special cases.” Markets Necessary, The is predicated on the the t.hn1 "Pnld.:jtry cannotl'be expecwdortz employ men more negrly to its capacity, buy raw materials and process mg’s unless it has confiderce in its ability to find markets for its production.” * * * “The one thing, therefore, required to set the wheels of industry in motion,” the report said, “is confidence that u._e;hg will be m-rklm." e report said buyer confidence would be restored by the re-employ- ment of men pow idle. Declaring that if the plan were put in orerluun “men would be positively employed in pro- duction throughout the United States,” the rt _said this would have the xauoc"-rm{e effects: = “Greater expenditure on their part than if they were receiving dnles:p:m creasing confidence on the part of the people because their friends and neigh- bors who had been out of work were being <ré-employed (this would stimu- Jate their own consumption): allevia- tion of the unrest which resuits in the development -of unfortunate political forces to unsound legislation.” Increased production would stimulate trnmpunmn ;n?d;m;;}ovmzm in the raw mal elds, the report con- tinued, adding: e “The progression of operations under | the plan represents conditions under a | natural return from a - depression ‘wherdn the confidence of this, that and the other industry in its ability to find markets is justified, and produc- tion and business begin to work toward | normal conditions.” | 'The plan, described as having been | approved by 83!; per cent of the hun- dreds of industrialists who examined it, was presented “as one that should not be carried out unless the only alterna- | tive should be the dole.” Its purpose, | however, the report said, was to re- establish industry in a way that would result in “the Jeast possible cost to Gov- ernment and leave no scar of legisla- tion after its need was over.” et BANKERS ARRESTED Pioneer’s Sons Accused of Okla- homa Irregularities. SHAWNEE, Okla., January 10 () — H. T. Douglas, jr., and Donald Douglas, sons of & ploneer ‘Shawnee banker whose six banks closed in November, were arrested here late last night on Federal warrants charging irregulari- ties in handling of the Shawnee Na- tional Bank funds. Donald Douglas, assistant cashier of | the bank, was charged specifically with embezzlement of $2,550, while Douglas, jr, widely known as Tom Douglas, was charged with benefiting through the | misappropriation of $8,440 in complaints tmpg by District Attorney Herbert K. Hyde. i REACHING OUTFOR Colds are increasing. In some sections Influenza is breaking out. | Don’t be alarmed, but don’t be | careless. A cold is much easier avoided than cured! Do the sensible thing !and adopt the ounce of -prevention i policy. Stay out of crowds as much | Avoid cotghers and sneezers. Dress warmly, keep vour feet dry and sleep in 2z well venti- |lated room. Every morning and night take a tablet or two of Grove's Laxative | Bromo Quinine. This will keep the bowels open and combat infection by cold germs. Mifliops- know Grove's Laxative | Bromo ifte as & excéllent cotd | remedy, but not enough know it as an @qually. excellent preventive. VICTIMS! Be Wise—Be Careful—Adopt This Simple Precautionary Measure ! { Learn its efficacy. and keep a pack- age handy all Winter long as your | “safety first” measure. 1f you have already caught cold there is nothing better you can| take than Grove's Laxative Bromo | Quinine. Tt doesn’t merely suppress | the cold—it ,drjves it completely | out "of- the system. At the same| | time, it tones: thie entire system and | fortifies against further attack. For more than forty wyears,| Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine | | has been the staidard cold and| grippe tablet of the world, thej| formula keeping pace with Modern Medicing. Now in two sizes—30c and c. Ask for it by the full ! name and look for the initials L Q stamped on every tablet. Re-| | liable dealers will not try to sell | your a substitute.—Advertisement. THE EVENING Coins Along Shore Bring Large Crowd Seeking Lost Gold —_— By the Associated Pres: GEORGETOWN, Del,, -January 10.—Copper coins washed up on the beach near Cape Henlopen gave rise to rumors of buried gold yesterday and brought scores of beachcombers to the shore, but residents of the vicinity denied there was any unusual find. Coins, they said, are exposed whenever wind and tide are right and accounts of “bucketfuls” are in proportion to the distance the account has traveled. Finders sald the coins date back to the fourteenth and fifteenth centu- ries. Old residents believe they are washed ashore from a wrecked ship. WOMEN CONTINUE PROMIBITION DRIVE Committee for Education Against Alcohol Not to “Yield to Clamor.” Continued agitation for prohibition, abstinence and dry candidates for office will be the program of the Women's National Ccmmittee - for Education Against Alcohol, Mrs. William Tilton, chairman of the organization, declared yesterday. She said her organization would not yield to the clamor of the politician and confine its activities to education in- iy uNEW o, Make your'stay in New Vot et el Enjoy a sunshiny out- side room with bath, dio with choice e and ALL NEW hotel conveniences at rates that start at §3 for one —34 for twoi STAR., WASHINGTON, stead of legislation. The statement was headed: “No Surrender! No Retreat! No Compromise!” “Moreover, our presence is necessary in the political arena,” she said, “not only for legislative and enforcement, but also for educational purposes, for it is a fact that education reaches the rank and file most effectively through the vigor of contests. “Should we yield to' the clamor of the politician and confine our efforts to education, in which we heartily believe, we should not only leave the liquor in- terest (which would not ‘get cut of poli- tics’) in complete control of elections, as in former days, but we should lose the educational effect of a vigorous campaign buttressed by incontrovertible facts. This we do not intend to do.” Mrs. Tilton opposed any compromises |and sald “we have not been deceived nor stampeded by the action of the national conventions in Chicago, stimu- lated by the hysterical hoodlums planted in the galleries.” “We Tecognize no right of national conventions,” she added, “to bind Sena- tors or Representatives, who are re- sponsible first to their cath of office and then to their constituents for what- ever action they may take on this great moral question.” WASHINGTON RESIDENTS TO RECEIVE LEGACIES Miss Marie and Gertrude Morse Remembered in Will of Gil- bert Colgate. | By the Associated Press. | NEW YORK, January 10 (#).—Gil- | bert Colgate, former head of Colgate & |Co., who dled January 5 at the age of 74, left most of his fortune to his chil- dren in a will offered for probate yes- terday. The document valued the es- tate at “over $20,000,” but it is believed to amount to millions. | An outright bequest of $50,000 was | left to & niece, Mrs. Mabel Hall Colgate ol Cambridge, Mass, and two cousins, Marie and Gertrude Mors both of | Washington, D. C., receive joint life estates in a $25,000 trust fund. | The children, who share the residue 7th Avenue at 31st Street OPPOSITE PENNSYLVANIA STATION C.W. RAMSEY, JR., MANAGER RED ROUGH HANDS beautified — here’s proof— WANT hands as dainty, soft and white as a debutante’s? Then try. this “wonder credm” mow used by over 6,000,000 womep to keep their bands beautiful! Busy housewives, especially, with their hands always inand outof water, praise Noxzema. ‘This marvelous skin cream is medi- cated, non-greasy, and quickly ab- sorbed with very little rubbing. Doctors prescribe Noxzema for chapped hands and other skin ills— because its soothing balm and heal- ing medication mend the tiny open wounds of chapped, broken skin. That's why they recommend it as the cream that heals. Make this simple convinc- ing test. Apply Noxzema to- OVERNIGHT NIGHT BEFORE APPLYING NOXZEMA MORNING AFTER USING, HANDS SMOOTH, WHITE night. Leave iton till morning. Only 8 hours—but what improvement you'll see! Hands that were painfully chapped, even cracking, the night ‘before are healed to petal-smooth- ness, delightfully sofrand white. Start tonight on thisbeauty treat~ ment for hands. Use Noxzema reg- ularly—at night and during the day after exposure—and you needn’t ever be ashamed to show your hands. And remember,'the hands that use Noxzema are the hands that men admire. Noxzema MEDITERRANEAN CRUISE FEBRUARY 4 - $365 UP SAILING FROM NIW YORK ALMOST AS LITT LE AS $10-A-DAY Visiting Spain— Portugal —Morocco—Gibraltar— Algiers — Naples — Corsica — Monte Carlo— Marseilles — Cannes —Majorca—the Azores. Shore trips arranged through Thomae Cook & Son. The S. S. De Grasse is an ideal cruise-ship. She has com- fortable bedrooms . . . beautiful roomy salons . . . a world- famous cuisine . . . efficient English-speaking stewards. She will take you far from the cares and colds of winter . . . to lands bathed in sunshine, full of interest and romance. . . . Any travel agent will be glad to make reservations for you. French Lne James F. Nolan, Gen. Pass. Agent 1429 Eye St. N.W., Washington, D. C. Tel. Met. 1440 D. C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1933. equally, are: Gilbert Florence G gate, {r; Mrs.| Two of the daughters married brothers. | | s m%&&. Rm'l # some time, neighbors sald today. The |chemist at the Bureau of orse and Miss Gertrude |two sisters had lived there with their |but was retired recently for disability, Morse haye not occupled gheir former |father, William H. Morse. Miss Marie |officials at the bufegu stated, bough, Mrs. Grace h and e residence, at 1114 Lamont street, for | Morse formerly was employed as a ' Morse also is retired, ' boug! B. Colgate, all of New York. $500 IN PRIZES F REE! IN PRIZES To Be Given By the Nash-Orr Motor Company FOR A SLOGAN FIRST PRIZF 0 $125 A SECOND PRIZE 15 coin *X° $115 REALIZING the value of a real advertising slogan and knowing that the slogans that are being used today by leading nationally advertised products were coined by outsiders and not by the advertisers themselves, the Nash-Orr Motor Company, Nash distributor, Is going to give the valuable prizes listed on this page to the persons that send in the best slogans pertaining to this firm. Gold and credit vouchers will be given to the winners, so read the rules governing this contest and send In your slogan today—you have as good an opportunity as anybody to win one of the prizes. THIRD PRIZE 10 oo “A" $110 vovcuer HONORABLE MENTION s l w CREDIT VOUCHER Rules of the Contest FIRST PRIZE goes to the person sending in the best slogan. Second prize for the next best, and %0 on. Write on one side of paper -only. Write your name and address plainly. Neatness doesn’t count; write with pencil, pen or typewriter—anything goes that the judges can read. It 1s not mecessary to use elther name of the Nash-Orr Motor Company or tho Nash Six or Eight Automobile in your slogan, although any or all may bo used it desired. Send as many slogans as you wish. Any one credit good for face value, not to exceed one-half the purchase price, on any sutomobile in stock. All prizes are given free. Everyome is eligible except employes of this firm. 3 Succssful contestants will be notified by mall. Honorable mention prizes to deserving contestants. All _slog: must be in the mall by midnight y, January 13, 1933. CREDIT 25 Gor GOLD VOUCHER CREDIT VOUCHER THE JUDGES who will decide the contest are: J. LEO SUGRUE, Times Automobile Editor GEORGE ADAMS HOWARD, Star Automobile Editor RICHARD MURPHY Manager Washington Automotive Trade Association Here are some suggested slogans. They will give you some idea of what to send in, but use your own idea, it may be just what we want. “Eventually, Why Not Now.” “Matchless Service.” “When It Rains It Pours.” “Ask sll_le Man Who Owns One.” “We Always Sell the Best.” “The Busy Corner.” “All Over own.” Send YOUR slogan in t::dny—-you CAN’T lose—and you MIGHT win a valuable prize. SEND ALL SLOGANS TO CONTEST DEPARTMENT ASH-ORRMOTOR COMPAN 1522 14th 5t. N. W. Nash Distributor 1733 14th St. N. W, Entrance, 909 F St. An Extraordinary Living Room Suite Value in Our January Clearance Drastic -Reductions Throughout the Store The Julius Lansburgh Furniture Co $120 Genuine Friezette 2-Pc. Living Room» Suite 75 This luxurious suite, with handsome carved frame of ma- hogany finish, is splendidly upholstered in genuine friezette, with resilient, reversible spring seat cushions—large, graceful sofa and a distinctive rolled-arm club chair. 85 Delivers This Suite White Cap Electric Washer 33 750 A guaranteed electric washer with a dependable motor. ..nicely finished. Con- venient terms arranged. furniture (5o, Entrance, 909 F St. Twin Studio Couch A popular style twin couch that can be $2 I.SO opened into a full size double bed or a pair of separate twin beds. "Covered in high-grade material and complete with 3 kapok filled Convenient Terms Easily Arranged pillows. - -

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