Evening Star Newspaper, January 31, 1933, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A—10 = ALKS WILL TRACE COMMUNIST IDEAS lev. Edmund A. Walsh of G. U. to Give Lecture Series Starting Feb. 10. Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, vice presi- cent of Georgetown University, will de- liver the first of a serles of lectures on ‘The Evolution of Communism” at Gaston Hall, Georgetown University, Thirty-seventh and O streets, on Feb- tuary 10 at 8:30 pm. The first lecture will be entitled “Classical Communism.” The series is seing given in pursuance of the policy ~f the School of Foreign Service of Georg!wvun University of offering each “ear a general course of lectures, open 5 the public, on & topic of current in- terest and importance. Dr. Walsh is regent of the School of moreign Service and the author of “The “all of the Russian Empire” and “The | Last Stand—an Interpretation of the Soviet Pive-Year Plan.” The second of the series, “Early Christian and Medieval Communism,” will be celivered on February 16. The dates of the other lectures follow: February 24, “Utopian Communism”; March 10, “Revolutionary Commu- March 16, “Scientific Commu- March 24, “Lenin’s Commu- nism”; April 7, “Capitalism and Com- munism in 1933”; April 21, “Recogni- tion of the Soviet State, 1” and April 28, “Recognition of the Soviet State, IL.” Should growing public interest advise 1t, the last two lectures, on recognition of Soviet Russia, will be advanced. Tickets for the series may be obtained by sending an application, inclosing a self-addressed and stamped envelope, to the secretary of the School of For- eign Service, Georgetown University. GRADUATION HELD AT FRANCIS SCHOOL Junior High Class of 42 Receives Diplomas at Annual Midwinter ‘Stalin’s Commu- Commencement. Forty-two diplomas were awarded as many graduates of the Francis Junior High School at its annual midyear | commencement yesterday. Mrs. Mary A. McNeill, member of the | Board of Education, presided and Rev. | J. Ross Barnum, pastor of the Ebe- | nezer A. M. E. Church, pronounced the invocation. Miss Joanna Houston, as- sistant dean of women at Howard Uni- | versity, addressed the graduates. Ora- | tions were delivered by Helen Proctor and Evelyn Cannon, members of the class. Vocal solos were sung by Lewis Magruder and James Armstead. A framed picture of Booker T. Washing- ton was presented for the graduating class to the school by May Savage, and it was accepted by Mrs. Mary H. Plum- mer, principal. Diplomas were awarded to the fol- lowing: James Armstead, Edna Beck- with, Mary Brown, PFrederick Duckett, Acton Evans, Stanley Gray, Lloyd Hardy, Austin Haywood, Ruby Hudson, Edith Hunt, Naomi Jones, Zack Lewis, Lewis Magruder, jr.; Ellsworth Rucker, John Tatum, jr.. Lois Toles, Genevieve Anderson, Evelyn Baltimore, Alice Bell, Edward Brown, Julia Butler, Evelyn Cannon, Elizabeth Clark, Frances Clark, Evelestine Cobb, Nancy Fountaine, Edna Fray, Evelyn Harper, Mattie Higgins, Edith Jackson, Albert Johnson, William Jones, George Moore, Mary Moton, Adele Myers, Helen Proctor, Mayette Savage, Charles Winston, Emma Clif- ford, Vivian Gill, Mildred Taylor and Della Turner. Minute Mystery. Solution to KELLEY HAS AN OFF DAY. (See Page A-3). “Buzz" Carnahan had left un- mistakable, though intlnxibl! evidence behind him. AROMA FROM HIS BTOGIE! TOBACCO, THOU IN SUCH A CLOUD DOST BIND US, THAT OUR WORST FOES CANNOT FIND US. —Charles Lamb. Birth Certificate Dropped by Robber Sends Him to Prison By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, January 31.—Al- fred Rollo’s mistake was in be- ing born, or at least in having any record made of it. His birth certificate caused his conviction yesterday for buglary. ‘The prosecutor waved the cer- tificate before the 18-year-old youths eyes. “That's mlne admitted Alfred. “I lost it.” It had been found at the scene of the robbery. The jury voted guilty. GRADUATES GIVE MACFARLAND TALKS Harry 0. Hine Presents Diplomas | v to 68 After Program of Class Orations. Macfarland Junior High School's graduating class of 68 received its diplo- mas from Harry O. Hine, secretary of the Board of Education, at the school’s commencement exercises yesterday. Oratory was confined to members of the class themselves, with Alice Berry giving the salutatory, Beatrice Fleisch- man and Mary Elizabeth Wrenn, the keynote speeches, 2nd Josephine Elliott delivering the valedictory. John Raw- lings, class president, presented the | class gift to the school. Mr. Hine awarded diplomas to the following: Josephine H. Elliott, Vir- ia Hunter, Rosalie Michaelson, Lil- jan M. Milans, Norman Bernstein, Leland Bolen, Richard Branson, Julius Lewis, Franklin Mades, William Pitzer, Oscar Reiver, Mary Elizabeth Wrenn, Robert Heitmuller, Dorothy S. Berman, Thelma D. Daly, Naomi Vigderhouse, Doris A. Christopher, Doris V. Diamond, Helen G. Kirks, Margaret M. Monck, Adele A. Theophile, Grace A. Waldecker, Evelyn D. Wallace. Roy C. Black, Paul M. Burtis, Walter R. Guthrie, Robert M. Ludwig, Lloyd L. McDonald, Willlam C. McPherson, Harold A. Nelson, Edward W. Pearson, Elliott Porte, John S. Rawlings, Julius | Sandler, Lloyd J. Shalin, Willlam l’il Souder, Donald C. Tolson, Charles M. | Young, Robert Berry, Enoch_ Vann, | Earl Whiting, Oscar Zweig, Beatrice | Fleischmann, Zona Hazzard, Kathryn | Magdeburger, Dorothy McDowell, Irene | Nichols, Dorothy Rose, Marie Williams, Fred V. Benjamin, A. Holmes Burnett, David A. Frantz, C. Clinton James, Lee | Raiford, Eli Shapiro, Alice L. Berry, Rose M. Ciango, Norma M. Howe, Jare | Kessler, Ada Pasternak, Ann M. feld, Sylvia F. Sherman, Lola Syl\esber Mary E. Ulrich, Elizabeth E. Ward, Evelyn C. wirgate Ida M. Yoder and! Wflli F. Turner. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, GRADUATES RECEIVE DUNBAR DIPLOMAS Class of 46 Hears Address by Prof. Benjamin Brawley at Mid- year Exercises. Dunbar High School graduated its midyear class of 46 last night under the chairmanship of Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assistant superintendent of schools. Prof. Benjamin Brawley delivered the commencement address, and Rev. E. L. Harrison pronounced the lnvou tion and the benediction. The High School Orchestra provided muda Diplomas were received by the fol- lowing: Qeorge Browne, Lawrence Goffney, |, James Gray, Harold Jackson, Willlam uual ‘William McConneu, James ‘William Richardson, Willlam . Frederick Smlth Francis ‘Thompson, George Trivers, Willlam Wade, Frank Warf, James Edward oung. c:gxt. Ashby, Ella Banks, Margaret Bell, Laura Berry, Katie Bundy, Myrtle Carter, America Dalton, Elizabeth Douglas, Juanita Evans, ~ Vermell Gaines, Kathryn Gregory, Mary Lan- caster, Margaretta McCard, Margle Mc- Daniel, Lelia Mickens, Lilyann Mmzr Dorothy Morrison, Lena Murray, Emma Pleasant, Nora Rasby, Mattie Robinson, Edna Selter, Inez Selden, Mamie Smith, Mae Spencer, Marguerite Starke, Alum| Thurston, Mildred Twine, Rosa White, cuxdolyn Williams and Alfreds Mae Belgian Exhibit Sails. ANTWERP, Belgium (/).—Two pretty Belgian dairy maids, two Belgian dogs used to draw milk wagons and 200 Belgian pigeons have left for Chicago where they will form a Belgian exhibit at the Century of Progress. The Bel- glan Parliament vetoed the bill provid- ing funds for this expedition and it is being financed by private groups. Following its success in Paris and un the Riviera cockroach racing is to be introduced in London. ‘FalseTeeth Don’t allow your false teeth to drop or slip when you eat, talk or laugh. Just sprinkle a little Kling on your plates. This new improved powder forms a comfort cushion—holds plates so snug, they feel and act like your own teeth. No more danger of rocking plates—eating will again be a joy. Leading dentists endorse Kling. Guaranteed better than any- thing you ever used or money back. Large package, 35c at all druggists. KLINGEES FIRMLY AND COMFORTABLY NASH FOR 1933 SEE YOUR NEAREST NASH DEALER “37%) 2 ““COLD* REASONS WHY VAPEX IS BETTER Common-sense facts that tell you what to do when you are ‘suffering with head-colds TESTS PROVE SUPERIORITY OF VAPIX Unbiased tests by a prominent medical re- search laboratory prove that the vapor of a single drop of Vapex kills dense colonies of germs present in head-colds. In exactly similar tests, other inhalants (often offered s substitutes for Vapex) were shown to be greatly inferior in germ-killing power. : A SO% INHALANT il Many cheaper imitations of Vapex are said t0 be “just s good.” But Science proves they are not. Vapex has a remarkable germ- Killing power. This is the extra value that Vapex brings you at very little extra cost. VaPEX has one decided advantage over other methods acold... the delightful Vapex vapor of relieving colds. You breathe Vapex. Relief is almost instant—for the vapor gets directly to the real seat of the breathing passages. Salves, drops, gargles, and sprays are mot likely to reach here. Because the breathing passages are a maze of hidden folds that only a vapor can penetrate naturally. This is the reason why the first few deep breaths of make you feel so much better—why breathing Vapex swiftly stops eniffles and sneezes... clears the head and nose .. . brings real relief. And Vapex has also a decided advantage over many other inhalants. Unbiased tests prove that it has a supe- rior germ-killing power. Since an unknown germ is thought to be the cause of colds, this important action of Vapex means greater safety and greater effectiveness. You'll like Vapex. The vapor is pleasant as mountain air and just as refreshing. There’s no mess . . . just a sprinkle on your handkerchief and at the ends of your pillow will bring twenty-four- hour relief. And Vapex is safe for babies as well as grown-ups. Try Vapex for your next cold. Breathe it to relieve colds . . . and breathe it to help prevent colds. VAPEX Months of relief tor only 75,: 1933. THE MOST MODERN MEN’S WEAR STORE IN AMERICA Fmal Reductlons Last Four Days—Store Closes at 6 P. M., February 4th 26 Suits. Broken sizes. A nominal charge for necessary alterations 114 Suits, two trousers. All sizes. A nominal charge for necessary alterations 170 Suits, 2 trousers. Fine worsteds. All sizes. $l6 .75 161 Suits, 2 trousers. All sizes. Deeply reduced.$21.75 12 Clergymen s Two-Trouser Suits, black tropi- cal worsteds. Small charge for necessary altera- tions $13.75 13 Clergymen’s Two-Trouser Suits, Fall weight, black unfimshed worsteds $16.75 150 pairs Separate Trousers left from suits, also golf knickers. $5 and $7.50 values. No altera- tions 110 Overcoats. All sizes. No alterations. 45 Overcoats. All sizes. No alterations. . 96 Overcoats. All sizes. No alterations. . 11 Burberry Overcoats. Sizes 36 to 42 1 Inverness Evening Cape Coat, $150 value. . ..$49.75 7 French Sedan Montagnac Overcoats. Sizes 36, 37, 38, 40 regular; 38 long; 39 and 42 stout 11 Topcoats. No alterations. . ..$11.75 18 Topcoats. No alterations. . ..$14.75 23 Topcoats. No alterations. . . ..$19.75 9 Trench Coats. Sizes 36 to 4. .. 34 Trench Coats. $10 values 19—$25 Chauffeurs’ Suits and Overcoats. Whip- cord. Broken sizes 20—$35 Chauffeurs’ Suits and Overcoats. ardine. Broken sizes 8 pairs Flannel Striped Trousers. Sizes 29 to 32 waist 26 pairs White Duck Trousers. Sizes 29 to 34 waist ... 35 Office Coats, black alpaca. $5 grade 29 Office Coats, black alpaca. $7.50 grade 6 Seersucker and Linen Suits. Sizes 35 and 36 regular and short. No alterations 27 Mohair and Tropical Worsted Suits. Sizes 36, 37, 38, 46 regular; 46 stout; 38, 39 long. No alterations $6.75 4 Silk Poplin Suits. Sizes 36 and 37.. : 21 Sport Coats. Tan and blue. Sizes 34 to 38. . . .$4. 95 13 Sport Coats. Tan. Sizes 36, 37, 42, 4 reg- ular; 38 long; 38 stout $9.75 18 Pairs Golf Knickers; linen and poplin; sizes 29, 30, 31, 42 and 44 waist $1.45 36 Butlers’ Coats. White duck. . .. SLIS 23 Tuxedo Suits. Broken sizes ..$14.75 3 Tuxedo Suits. Sizes 36 regular and short 5 Full Dress Suits. Sizes 40, 42 long; 38, 39, 42 stout $19.75 14 Frock Coats and Vests. Broken sizes. 11 Frock Coats and Vests. Broken sizes: 29 Pairs Worsted Striped Dress Trousers; good range of sizes 23 Pairs Worsted Strlped Dress Trousers. 102 Tuxedo Vests. All sizes 48 Tuxedo Vests. All sizes. .. 30 Full Dress Vests. White plque Shoes 26 Pairs Johnston & Murphy Oxfords. $10 and $12 values. Small and large sizes 44 Pairs Thompson Bros. Oxfords. $10 values. Small and large sizes 91 Pairs Teck Oxfords. $5 values. Gab- Broken 36 Pairs Sports Oxfords. $5 values. Small and large sizes 12 Pairs Golf Oxfords. $8 to $12 values. Sizes9, 914 and 10.. 3 Pairs Rldmg Boots. $25 values. Sizes 6, 8 and 8% 13 Pairs Tennis Shoes 20-Pairs Boy Scout High Shoes ¥ 1,400 Shirts, white and patterns; collar-attached and neckband; all sizes. $1.55 and $1.95 values. . 360 Shirts, fine woven madras; neckband style with 2 separate collars. Sizes 14 to 17. $2.50 and $3.50 values ....... SR A R AR All Dress Shirts, former prices disregarded. .. 180 Neckties. S55c values 867 Neckties. $1.45 and $1.95 values.. 94 Pajamas. $1.65 values 76 Knitted Union Suits. $1.55 values 222 Knitted Shirts and Drawers, Winstead make; sizes 34 to 50. $1.85 values 496 Athletic Shirts and Shorts. $1 values 1,963 pairs Gloves, mocha, pigskin and capeskin. Meyers make. $3.50 values . cotscni 43 Sweaters, wool; sleeveless. $1.95 values 19 Sweaters, wool pullovers. $2.95 values.. 11 Coat Sweaters, wool. $5 values. . 111 Wool Mufflers. $1.95 values... 75 Mufflers. $1 values : 346 Handkerchiefs, colored bordered linen. 35c values H 96 pairs Imported Wool Golf Hose. $1.95 and $3.50 values .......... S e aa e 950 183 Be!ts $1 values 88 pairs Suspenders. $1 values. Van Heusen and Arrow Collars, small flnd ]arge 17 Fitted Cases .......... Salsisiisine /2 Price 9 House Coats, silk and wool. $5 and $10 values. .$3.45 39 Silk Robes. $20 values . 85 Robes, silk and wool. $10 values.....v.u. cae. $5.95 49 Robes, washable broadcloth, $3.50 values. .. .$1.65 33 Robes, Summer weight. $5 values. ... . ¢ oumm $2.65 Hats and Caps 84 Hats. $5 values. Sizes 6%, 7, 714 . «uc e $2.68 12 Hats. $7 and $10 values. 6%, 7 .. 52 Hats. $3.50 values. Sizes 6%, 7, 7Y% and 14 Silk and Opera Hats, silk, sizes 63 to 7% opera 6%, 7, 7Y% 43 Chauffeurs’ Caps. All sizes....ccceveomaee. 5195 94 Golf Caps. $3 values. All sizes. ... .memearc.. 85¢ 93 Golf Caps. $1 values. All sizes 49¢ 30 Panama Hats. $5 values. Sizes 67,7 .$1.45 25 Walking Sticks, entire stock _reduced Vs Boys’ Shop 20 Prep Suits, 2 trouser. Sizes 14 to 22 S Prep Suits, 2 trouser. Sizes 14 to 17. No altera- tions . $5.95 8 Prep Suits, 2 trousers. Sizes 16, 20 22 ..$11.65 36—2-Knicker Suits. Sizes 8 to 18.. ..$6.95 10 Overcoats. Sizes 11 to 17 years. . ..$7.65 16 Overcoats. Sizes 17 to 22 years. . 7 Leather Coats. Sizes 10, 14 and 16. . 20 Leatherette Coats. Sizes 12 to 18 97 Pairs Wool Knickers and Long Pants. Sizes 13 to 18 $1.10 17 Pairs Wool Knickers and Long Pants. 13 to 18 $1.39 17 Pairs Wool Knickers and Long Pants. 11to18 7% 21 Khaki Riding Breeches. All sizes 79¢ 200 Pairs Khaki and Linen Wash Knickers S3 Caps. Mostly small sizes $1.65 ALL BOYS’ FURNISHINGS AT TREMENDOUS REDUCTIONS All Sales Final and for Cash—No C. O.D.s, No Exchanges or Refunds %W& New York Avenue at Fifteenth

Other pages from this issue: