Evening Star Newspaper, January 29, 1933, Page 17

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., JANUARY 29, 1933—PART ONE. CHARGES CAMPAIGN ON GRAZING FEES |Senator Carey Sees Organ- | ized Move Against Resolu- tion for Lower Ratés. BACKS ROLSEVELT ONRALYAY LA Couzens, Interstate Trade Leader, Seeks Merger ‘4 of U. S. Powers. [ Speaker GERMAN NOVELIST TO TALK HERE TONIGHT. FORMER MCADE TANK CHIEF LEAVES TUESDAY. ' To Retire By the Associated Press. Senator Carey, Republican, Wyoming, | vesterday told newspaper men he be- | lieved “the Department of Agriculture | or the Forest Service was encouraging” | ecucational authorities to come to| i | Washington and protest against low fees for grazing stock on forest lands, The whole transportation act s ; l be revised and a new com : ‘ up to do equity betw busses, waterways and of transportation, in the opinicn tor Couzens of M g the Interstate Commerc: While discussing Prosid velt's scheme of es ernmental burcaus, one of t tion and one of communication, Scnator 7 | Couzens said: “it m N view that a commisison having = to do over a period of m to consider railrond | hardly the body to take ov lation of compcting me! Pportation. “The tr e in the past hes boen that the railroads have had a too ef- fectual lobby, which has demanded to> much for the railroads and too vigor- ous control of their competitors. Caution Advis>d, t “Through my membership on the In = 1" po terstate Comme: am | e anxious to aid in tin T along the line which appeas to be in- | poc dorsed by Mr. Roosevelt.” the Ar Sendtor Smith of South Carolina gradu; thinks that railroads should be as far as is safely p: time as conditi ys, we can better dote lines a reorganiza He thinks that und s now exist it is dange GEN. ROCKENBACH. ached the age of €4, Brig. el D. Rockenbach, formerly he tank center at Camp | d., ond now in| m Houston, at| to be placed on , tive of Vir- ed out 42 years of active » and is one of the He entered 1831, having Virginia own &s the “West n of Cuba and r in_the Philip- of the World for a year as with the German | s in the field colonel, Rockenbach Siaii cificers who accom- hing to France in 1917 Decembe year he the ba Nazaire. ade its chief during the pa Puerto Rico, and Senator Dill of Washing that all transportation, ra inland waterwas and come under the jyris: terstate Commerce Con says the main trouble with now is that their capital struc top heavy and that until water squeczed out of thei: k plete internal reor; on takes place they will not get on their Aware of S n believe c, bus - awarded and and In establishing these mental bureaus Mr. Roos 1 that he will strike c: s y i PeaNor et Tt would take from the Dey lenced & Commerce the aircraft resula 5 i S from the Treasury Depart i g steamboat _inspection GREAT SEAL’S EMBLEMS would absorb the present F Commission and the Ra e and strip the Inters Commission of its juri telephone and telegraph Hayes to Discuss Their Significance. e e ance of en 'ms and mot- Mass Meeting Called. | Seal of the niten States will be g LYON PARK, Va., January 28 (Spe- | Cussed tcnight before a mecting in | Carey said. which are sought in a resolution by him and Seneator Steiwer, Republican, Oregon. The resolution of the two Senators seeks to continue through 1933 the half-rate fees sei up for 1932 by an order of Seercetary Hyde, which fol- lowed introduction of a similar reso- lution by Carey and Senator Thomas, Republican, Idaho, last year. Fees Total $2,000,000. The fees aggregate annually about 32,000,000 at the regular rates, rang-| | ing from 5 cents per head per month | for sheep to 14 cents per month per head for cattle. States receive 25 per cent of the payments for their school Tunds. “The department is trying to ask that the stockmen be made to pay a million more so the schools can get $250,000,” “I have never received a protest from anybody in my State about lowering the rates, or from the school cfficials. Accuses Department. “It is my oplnion that these people school cofficials) are being encouraged | to come here by the depatment.” His comment came after learnin several educational officials would ap- pear next week before a House com- mittee considering a similar move in that branch of Congress, to object to_it. The campaign for lower fees is be- vaged on the House side by Repre- ves nith, Republican, Idaho; or, Democrat, Colorado, and Eatcn, Republican, Colorado, among others. DR. CALIVER TO SPEAK Will Address Public School Asso- ciaticn Wednesday Night. ta the meeting of School Association Wednesday night the board rocm of the District Building Dr. Caliver will describe “The Na- tional Situation in Regard to Colored School DR. LION FEUCHTWANGER, Noted German novelist, will address the Jewish Community Center tonight. His subject will be “Has Mankind Changed in the Last Two Thousand Years?” | _The writer is in this country for a shert visit and will leave within a few days for Palestine, where he will en- | 8age in research for a new book. He is the author of “Power,” “Success,” “The Ugly Duchess” and the more re- cent and much-discussed “Josephus.” Prior to Dr. Feuchtwanger’s address | the center will elect officers and trustees, and chairmen of the various depart- | ments will present reports on a sur- vey of attendance records of the insti- tution. The reports will show an‘average | attendance at the center of 26,000 per | week. | WILL LEC'TU§E ON TIBET Miss Lichtmann to Address Roer- ich Society Tomorrow. | Miss Esher Lichtmann, vice president | | of the Roerich Museum of New York, | will recount her experiences during a | three-year stay in Tibet at a meeting of the Washington Roerich Society tomor- row at 8:30 p.m., at the Sears, Roebuck Art Gallery, 1106 Connccticut avenue. | The, talk will be illustrated with slides. | A’ short program of ether-wave mu- | sic. played by accemrpanied by Mme. Mertvago-Hanen- | feldt, will follow the lecture. The meet- | ing will be open to the public. STUDENTS PLAN BALL The District Conference of the Cath- colic Students Mission Crusade will hold its eight annual ball Friday night at Mrs. Charles W. Stark, | An address of Miss E. F. G. | the Mayflower Hotel. Approximately Merritt on “Our Local Colored Schools 1800 persons, including stucents and and Their Needs” will follow. | alumni of various Catholic academies, The Glee Club of Armstrong High |colleges and universities, are scheduled | School will furnish music. to attend eial).—The Arlington County Taxpayers’ | Theos-phieal Hall by Arth League will hold a mass meeting at the | an attorne: Lyon Park Community House Thursday | history and bo n | night. The pub! lve seen all the new low priced cars and ' ROCKNES NUMBER ONE - IN QUALITY!” OU won’t have to wait for " & the end of 1933 to find out which car is the low-priced field’s e ONLY ROCKNE HAS THEM Ai.ll «Six cylinder 70 h. p. engine floated in live rubber! o Free wheeling, synchroe nized shift and silent second! « Auto- volumeeversold byafirstyear car! This 1933 Rockne hasn’t been Number One Car. That’s already settled . . . by Rockne! In ap. pearance, performance, comfort, quality—and particularly in character —Rockne is ’way out in front. Furthermore, this roomy, luxurious 1933 Rockne is far * ahead in every way of the Rockne that went Sfrom 31st place in sales last January to 8th place in 8 months... the Rockne that had the biggest per cent of the total cheapened or skimped . . . in fact, it reaches into the higher priced field for its specifications. No car that sells within $250 above the 1933 Rockne’s price has such luxuriousinteriors, such riding comfort. It’s speedy, it’s safe, it’s smartly superior in style. It’s a dream of a car to drive—a positive marvel of economy to maintain. Come in today and arrange to take out a 1933 Rockne for a convincing trial drive! —_— On Display at the Auto Show—W ashington Auditorium, Jan. 28th to Feb. 5th CITY 'DEALERS———————— MODERN AUTO SALES 2303 14th St. N.W. Colum iith & R YW, bia 9396 1132 Conn. Ave. LEE D. BUTLER, Col. Nat. Inc. ALBER & McNEIL, Inc. 0 1118 P St. N.W, 61 Decatur 1117 NEARBY DEALERS oo BOYD-CARLIN MOTOR CO. Alexandria, Va. WOODSON MOTORS CO. Rockville, Md. Silver Spring, Md. BROSIUS BROS. & GORMLEY, Inc. COLLEGE PARK AUTO PLACE College Park, Md. Greenwood 2608 JOHN T. PARRAN Indian Head, Md. NE AND my'ic switch key starting! o Double-drop, rigid X-framel o Silent threaded spring shackles! e Quadruply counter- weighted crankshafts! o Electro-plated pistons! e Hydraulic shock absorbers! Extra large brakes! o Extra large ca- pacity batteries! o Safety glass wind- shields! ¢ Closed bodies wired for radiol ¢ Extra roomy, more luxurious interiors! « Contoured upholstery with special coil springs! « One-piece, all- steel bodies! « Full aerodynamic lines! Smaller wheels, lower over-all height! DEBAKER SIX GUARANTEELf ¢ BY S R. P BRANDT TAKES PRESS CLUB HELM New President’s Adventures in Russia Burlesqued in Extra and Newsreel. Raymcnd P. Brandt. Washington correspondent for the St. Louis Post- Dispatch, was inducted as president of the National Press Club last night. suc- ceeding Bascom N. Timmons. There were mewspaper men present, howover, | and hardly had the new president begun his inaugural address when all of the “scandal” of his hidden past was |served up to the guests in an extra special extra edition. Brandt served with the Hocver relief agency in Russia, and, the extra re- ported, since then he hao been foment- | ing a plot to Americanize the Volga | boatmen by teaching them to croon “Ole Man River.” The allegations were | supported by a graphic newsreel of the | adventures of the expedition, hitherts cuppressed. The astounded guests saw “Pete” Brandt and his administration | climbing the steppes to acquaint the Russians with their five-card plan. After many close shaves, the enraged Russians demanded a “new deal” and chased Commisar Brandsky back across the Dneiperstroy to the land of tech- | nocracy and ledger-in-the-red. The chase was led by a pack of Missouri houn’ dcgs, closely followed by trans- port biplanes. Sale of Manhattan Under Fire. Brandt's marvelous escape was chron- icled in a dicpatch from the Munch- ener Gesellschaftunteragesblattdn, un- der the headline, “Home Town Poy Macht Gut.” The Resolutions Committee insisted on bringing in a report urging indict- ment of the Manhattan Indians, who sold New York to the Dutch for $24, for larceny. The committee also recom- mended higher import duties on horse- feathers and rescinding the Louisiana purchase by turning the territory back to Huey Long. A point of order against the committee was sustained without a roll call vote. Sir Willmott Lewis Speaks. Eugene (Reds) Leggett, Detroit Frec Press correspondent and a former presi- dent of the club, explained the in- | augurations were held on Saturday be- cause the next day was generally “"Pure Norwegian VITAMIN-TESTED' L1V coP L ER v §7c 97 Gal. $27% 3 VER oo LIVER o, CConcaNTRATE TABLETS with certified content of Vitamine and “D" 120 Tablets 59 A% S OF - u‘?é‘r‘t‘lm Munt-flavored or Plain Breaks-It INHALANT Gt BT e 25 Pkg. Breaks-It Cold Teblets For Nosc and Throat $1.00 Value 59 Cut to Sunday. Sir Willmott Lewis also made & speech, but declined to reveal where Queen Mary buys her hats. This in- ‘l;;mtlnnbe‘gl‘dw b;e‘n expected, Sdir ott ‘ashington correspond- ent for the London Times. The following other officers were in- ducted along with Mr. Brandt: William C. Murphy, jr., Philadelphia Public Ledger, vice president; Charles A. Hamilton, Troy (N. Y.) Times, treas- urer; Prederick W. Perkins, Washington %lvewmneuprzs Georld eh!ll. Barrows, as| on , ofinancial secretary; George E. Durno, International ms Service; Lee Poe Hart, New York Journal of Commerce; Lyle C. Wilson, United Press; John F. Chester, Associat- ed Press; Ralph A. Collins, New York Sun; Lorenzo W. Martin, Louisville Times, and George W. Stimpson, special writer, members of the board of governors. DINNER TO BE HELD The eighth anniversary of the Co- lumbia Heights Business Men's Asso- | ciation will be cglebrated February 16i with a dinner and®dance in the New Amsterdam Hotel. b The Committce on Arrangements in- cludes L. R. Gottlieb, chairman: Miss Lillias Cropper, George A. Ford, Dr. W. | V. Connors, Willilam F. Dismer, Harry Gordon, Benjamin Rosenfeld, Joseph | Ofano, Collins O. Lamb, Maurice Levi- tan, Frank J. Sobotka and Nathaniel Mountford. N p SPECIAL SALE PRI Centified ASPIRIN Tablets—100s ... 37e Agarol—$1.50size . . 86e Seidlitz Powders—12' 17« Cascara Tablets—100s .. ... 17e Bromo Seltzer—60c size ... 3Fe Petroleum Jolly—25c Jar. .. Zinc Ointment—25ctube.... 13e Ichthyol Ointment—25c.... ¥7e Sulphur Ointment-25.... 17e Blue Ointment—25. Boric Acid Ointment—25c..” 7e First Aid Ointment. Psyllium Seed Best Grade Imported Black Full Pound IN GLASS JAR 49' Phillips Milk of Magnesia—50c 29¢ Citrate of Magnesia—25c..” Qe Amido Pyrine—12's . 1% Penelin Liniment—35 Bottle 23¢ U.C.O. Throat Pastilles—25c 17e Yellow Throat Mixture—25c 17e STOP KO For Relief of Cough and Hoarseness 60c Size CuT TO 37 REM—60c Bottle. ............ 30e Rhinitis Tab’s—7% Full Swength 37 ® S0cHalfSwength ... . 23e Hill’s Cascara Quinine— 3c 1Qe 2 gr.Quinine Pills—100's.... 6Qe Analgesic Balm—35c Tube .. 17e¢ CIGARS SAVE at our CUT PRICES CIGARETTE CHILDREN RESCUED Three Motherless Girls Sent to Health School and One Already derson said, “now is in her tenth year, | were the highe but was only 3 Ut P P 'Lucky Strikes z for o | mother dted from tubercuosts. The others were then 2 and 4 years old, re- &pectively. “All three were found to have a tu- berculous infection, and, when they reached school age, were sent to the Allison Health School. They are taken regularly each month to the Child Wel- fare clinic of the Children's Hospital and at regular intervzls are examined at our tuberculosis clinic. The foster mother is instructed as to their proper care at home by our public heslth | workers. The oldest of the three re- FROM TUBERCULOSIS| Has Regained Health. The story of how three little mother- less girls, under the care of a foster Ceived her recovery card last year show- mother, are now making a successful fight against g childhood tuberculous infection was told yesterday by Dr.| V{loll Russell Anderson, medical adviser | by the Board of Public Welfare. o ing normal health and the other two are 50 far advanced they are likely to get their certificates this year.” The foster mother has been employed | 'Dr. Anderson :aid the District mor- Dr. An- | tality figures from tuberculosis in 1932 in 18 years, 599 deaths the Tuberculosis Association. | “The youngest of the girls,” weeks old when her resulting froy KAHN on 7th St. Established 35 Years 35 Years Genuine Toric Glasses b Far or Near $ 3 50 [ ) Shell or Metal Frame Genuine Toric KRYPTOK Invisible Bifocal Lenses Toric Kryptok Bifocal Lenes (one pair to see near Sold regularly $15. Special 617 Seventh St. NW. = Specials Monday and Tuesday Complete With Complete Oulfif With Case and Cleaner Included First and best gquality. and far). Best lenses made. $ i .50 price Monday and Tuesday. Between F and G Streets Heavy Imported RUSSIAN MINERAL OIL "39:° 73 Galloa ‘z" e . e Pitcher CASTORIA—40c size 1Fe Mercurochrome—25¢ Bottle 1Fe Spirits Peppermint—20z. 2Qe Arom. Spirits of Ammonis,zor 15¢ Glycerine Suppositories; 12's £7e Quire Pure White Sterilized , Hospital COTTON Ist F‘Illltl)lllb z7e BANDAGES 1in.x 10 yards ... 2 in. x 10 yards "~ ADHESIVE TAPE 15in. x 5 yards 1in.x S yards. 134 in. x S vard 2in.x S yards. sx MOLLE Brushless Shaving Cream BAY RUM 40z Phg 29- 16- Gibson’s Shaving Cream, soctibe 2% @ Keenan’s Brushles Sh.Crin.50c 21 ¢ LILAC VEGETAL—50 Bottle 1be Berté Hair Dressing— 50c... 17e¢ Julip Mint Tooth Paste, 30c Tube 2% @ PEROXIDE of Hydrogen, 160z. 17e Linde Arlen COLD CREAM Fu;’ls;:lu.ll\:..ln z& Hind’s Honey & Almond Cr. 5c 2Q¢ Daudet Hand Lotion, 60c size 27 ¢ Glycerine & Rose Water, 40z. 17e ' KLEENEX—Full Size Pkg. © 14¢ Goodrich Rubber Gloves,50c 27¢ Castile Soap—Full Ib. Bar . 10c LUX SOAP 3 for 21¢ 1 LUX FLAKES — 9° LIFEBUOY 2 SOAP—10cCake 6° 35¢ LIFEBUOY_ AVING CREA! 12-0z. Bottle K-M ELECTRIC HEATING PAD $3.50 Value 1 Special for .z * e — Health Lamp $2.00 Value MODESS Regular Fkg.s—ll't 160 Venida N.; Sanitary Napkins XL ge Popular Brand Cigars, Cigarettes, To- baccos and Pipes at REAL SAVINGS Us Your PRESCRIPTIONS For Guaranteed, Prompt, Reliable Service Es Prescription filled graduate Registered Pharmacist. $1.00 Value Cit to 49:

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