Evening Star Newspaper, March 12, 1933, Page 34

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g8 = FIXED DATE URGE FOR EASTER RITES Churches’ Council Debating Calendar Reform to Stop Shifting. CAPITAL’S MILK SUPPLY 1S DISCUSSED ON RADIO Association Official Talks on Station WISV, cussed by John McGill, jr., secretary- treasurer of the Maryland and Virginia Station WJSV. Mr. McGill's address | was the seventh in a series on “Leading Manufacturers of Chamber of Commerce. Approximately 65,000 gallons of - are produced daily by the 1,260 Maryland and Virginia Producers’ ‘.‘;ZEB‘,"‘...?:“'“.'""’"“"’" area. Arlington, Fauquier, Lout goumlu, eorges, Washington’s milk supply was dis- | Counties, Md.. Counties, W. Va, gm ucllm’e lngec:gnhwlwhlch milk roducing is_subjec Milk Producers' Assoclation, during & | fne Healih Depastment was radio talk broadcast last night by| Mr. McGill. law passed by Congress in 1925, “No city in the United States has so Industries in Washington,” presented | high a quality of milk as Washington,” | orchestra, These dairies Prince Wil 5 don, Culpeper and Orange Montgomery, - Prince Frederick and Washin, d Jefferson and Berkely | diplomat, ing of milk here. " John Q. Tilson under auspices of the Committee on the speaker declared in pointing out | fet supper will be served. DIPLOMAT WILL SPEAK |Representative J. Q. Tilson Also to Address Trade Board. Count Ernesto Russo, statesman and and former Representative of Connecticut will be | be inspected on Friday jointly by the guests of honor and speakers at the [ Pine Arts Com: tors of | March meeting of the Washington Board by | of Trace in the Mayflower Hotel Tues- This is required under the | day night at 8 p.m. An unusual program of entertain- | ment, including music by a well known has been arranged. A buf- HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Fine Arts and Planning Board Members to Hold Joint Session Friday. The new House Office Building® will mission and the National tinplul Park and Planning Commis- slon. Officlals today announced that this will be at the invitation of the Allied Architects, Inc., which drew the plans for the new structure. The two groups are to assemble at 11 o'clock, inspect the THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., MARCH 12, 1933—PART THREE. (he - Washingion | mary, improyements aceved n the| GROUP WILL INSPECT NEW building, have luncheon and then go into joint in the afternoon at the- pl ‘commission’s conference R s simong the questions the two consider together is that of the bridge over B street, south, connecting two of the new De- partment of Agriculture buildings, near the Buread of Engraving and Printing. H P. Caemmerer, executive secretary of the Fine Arts Commission, said that | he has been advised the Department of | Agriculture desires that this utllity | bridge be retained. e Through its new department of na- tional economy Mexico will bid for tourists and foreign commerce. MONROE SCHOOL HALL APPROPRIATION URGED Replacement in D. C. Supply Bill Is Favored by Pleasant Plains Citizens. A resolution asking that an appre priation for the Monroe School's assembly hall be replaced in the District appropriation bill, from which it was stricken, was passed last night by the Pleasant Plains Citizens’ Association Friday night. . Other resolutions passed by the asso- clation _included one indorsing Miss Carrie Knox as secretary of the Com- munity Center to fill the vacan will be created by the ren;mflyox:hs Mrs. Pelham, present secretary; another asking for improvements o Patrmont street between Sixth street and Sherman avenue, and Girard betwéen Georgia and Sherman avenues, and éne asking for segregation and adequate provision for tubercular children in the schools. —_— Walter Greenleaf to Speak. | Walter Greenleaf of the United States Office of Education will acdress the | Alice Deal Junior High School Home | and School Association on “Progressive ‘Trends in College Entrance” at the as- | sociation’s meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow night. A business session will precede | the talk. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 11—Easter, the i K FOR ANNIVERSARY SIGNS angie. Shall it continue to roam through March and April, coming one year when snow is on the ground and an- other when Spring flowers are in full bloom? Variation Termed Nulsance. Or shall the churches, forgetting tradition. agfee to a fixed date, thus placing themselves in allience with various groups who contend that the feast day's variable occurrence is a nuisance to business, financial and edu- cational systems? These are some of the questions which the research department of the Fed- eral Council of Churches, acting on instructions from the council’s Execu- tive Committee, is trying to answer. In doing so the department is study- ing the attitude of tne council's 26 de- nominational members to calendar re- for min general as well as to the sta- bilization of Easter in particular. ALL OVER! . . th Use Your Charg > Account | Anniversary ONE-DAY SUPER SPECIAL Thanks for the 30% Customers’ Increase You gave us on the opening day of the Anniversary, Friday. As this is being written, crowds are surging throughout our store. The optimistic note of this campaign has given our customers and our em- ployees new confidence in the future of Washington. - In spite of the present emergency it has brought more customers to our store in a buying mood than we have seen since Christmas. Come on down tomorrow and join the happy throng who are saving money in our Thirty-Seventh Anniversary Sale. . Calendar Change Involved. The survey is g undertaken at the request of the Universal Christian Council of Life and Work. at Geneva, acting at the instance of the League of Nations., which has long been studying the question of a new calendar. Proponents of calendar reform point out that under the present system E T can fall on any one of 35 dates. rthermore, they say, the clothing and military 1rades make Easter a piv- otal point. If it falls early, people will not buy Spring outfits: if it falls late. they may wear Winter clothing till Easter, then change to Summer styles. neglecting Spring outfits entirely. A variable Easter, they argue, disrupts school vacation sthedules and affects communication programs. W ashable Cape! Soft, Fine Kid! 5195 & $2:¢° GLOVES MONDAY ONLY 1 Doz. “Dove” Sanitary Napkins $1.09 1 Dozen Boxes Regularly $2 NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS We Sold Out by Noon on Friday! So Here Are 250 More GAGE Hats at 57 49 Black, navy, brown, gray and beige—all head sizes. (Third Floor, The Hecht Co.) Many Nations Approve. ‘The League of Nations reports that 26 governments, including France, Ger- many, Spain, Great Britain and the United States, have indorsed its act for the stabilization of Easter. ‘The Sunday following the second Sat- urday in April has been suggested by some governments as suitable for the observance. A fixed date, such as Sun- day. April 8, which would be possible if a perpetual calendar should be adopted, is preferred by some groups and indi- viduals. PUBLIC WORKS PLANNING SUPPORT IS PREDICTED U. S. Employment Stabilization Board Director Talks on C. of C. Forum. MONDAY ONLY! Toilet Tissue 39 Reg. $1 Dos. Rolls 1000 sheets to roll! Green, pink, blue, or- chid, yellow. (Main Floor. The Hecht Co.) NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS More support for “advance planning” | of public works in the community was predicted last night by D. H. Sawyer, | director of the Federal Employment Stabilization Board, in the course of a talk in the Washington Chamber of Commercé forum broadcast by Station WMAL. “Those interested in public affairs | can easily acquaint themselves with the | details of the advance planning of pub- | lic works in the District,” Mr. Sawyer | said. “by a study of a recently published | document of the Federal Stabilization Board. As the idea becomes better un- derstood I am sure the people of Wash- ington will not only recognize its value, | but give it unqualified support.” The program of advanced public plan- ning is advocated by the District Com- missioners, whose indorsement appears in the booklet referred to by Mr. Sawyer. Pull-ons and costume styles— greige, mode, eggshell, sand, black and brown. Dozen Rolls No Phone or Mail Orders S IMAIN FLOOR. ~FHE HECHT CO.) CLINIC TO BE OPENED Tuberculosis Work to Be Carried on at 301 C Street. The tuberculosis clinic of the District Health Department will be established this week in quarters acquired by the Iocal government at 301 C street. it was | announced yesterday by Dr. William C. Fowler, health officer. New quarters for the clinic have been | rovided in an old building which has | beéen remodeled for the purpose. i The present quarters of the clinic, at 512 I street, it is reported, are to be devoted hereafter to social hygiene work of the Health Department CANAL CHOICE REPORTED Col. Julian L. Schley Expected to Be Nominated Governor. $25 & $29.50 SAMPLE COATS s8¢ For Misses and Women $10-94 Imagine — gorgeous furs like galyac, ermine, kolinsky, mole, Canadian wolf, squirrel! ONE-DAY SUPER SPECIAL An out-and-out sensation! $1.95 & $2.95 A Knitted Sports Frocks 1.39 | They look like a mil- lion—they cost just a song! Are women buying? ALL-SILK ' = French Cr epe Yes, when they can SLIPS CLEAR, FINE .19 - Silk $2.29 HO SE 5Qc 3 Pairs $1.45 v, Democratic naticnal r the Canal Zone, said | yesterday he had been informed by Secretary Dern of the War Department | that the nomination of Col, Julian L. Schley, as Governor of the Canal Zone, would be sent to the Senate shortly. 4o TCuTSley said e understood it was submitted late today, but the = 1 Senate adjourned without receiving the . French non-rip eeams! nomination from the White House. 5 styles — tailored or with alencon-type laces. White, tea-rose, 34-44. Straight or V tops. (Main Floor.) Cut full, 47 inches long, — = e —— WHERE TO DINE. " THE BLUE LANTERN INN ANN.APOLIS, MD. Kire George st.¥between Gates 2 and 3 of the Naval Academy. Phone 8§40, Special Sunday Dinner . it __ Supper on Sunday Nights 2 Adjustable = = = Shoulder ; Plate L Olmsted Spec heon, 55¢ Straps Spey 50-Cent Dinner | Daily and Sunday, 11 AM. 10 10 P.M. ‘ De Luxe Dollar Dinner | | e DETACH- ABLE CAPE.- COLLARS Have two coats in e separate- one! y o DETACH- ABLE FUR TIES Wear the They're in lovely, luscious PASTELS! And note the PUFF sleeves, the trick collar lines, the lovely, lacy Sizes 14-20. The CHIFFONS — dainty picot tops; sturdy plated soles and extra heel reinforce- ments. g The SERVICE-. WEIGHTS—mercer- ized garter welts and soles for long wear. « Picot topa. 5,100 pairs—7 of the “snrartest, néw Spring tones! accents. FUR CUFFS Elegant— luxurious! No Phone or Mail Orders! (SPORTS SHOP, THIRD FLOOR, THE HECHT CO.) Daily, 5 P.M. to 10 P.M. Sunday, 12 to 10 P.M. Olmsted Grill 1336 G_Street Misses, 14 to 20; Women, 38 to 44; Larger Women, 46 to 50; Little Women, 3513 to 4313, (THIRD FLOOR, THE HECHT ©O.) Campbell Coffee Shoppe 45(: Sunday Dinners Roast turkey (cranberries). roast chicken, steak: 5. chops and sea food served at We've been selling from 3 to 5 doz. of these right up to now—at $1.95 SILK BLOUSES $ 1 29 Prints—pastel crepes! New Taffetas! ‘Tallored or dressmaker types. Long sleeves—puff sleeves. And all wash- able! 34-44. Silk Skirts $1.7¢ (THIRD FLOOR, THE HECHT CO.) pind V‘\” MONDAY ONLY Guerlain’s SHALIMA Perfume Regularly $1.50 dram 89C dram Guerlain’s L’ HEURE BLEU Regularly 49c¢ dram 65c dram Monday only! No mail or phone Francis Scott Key Hotel Frederick, Maryland Fine Table D’Hote Dinner 8! and $1.25 §00. More of Those Fine Link Mesh Bags 31 Sold the first shipment out in 1 hour! Beautiful pastel combina- tions. Enamel frames, silk lin- ings. (Maln Floor, The Hecht Co.) Printed or Plain The Historic Estate of Mrs. Mark Reid Yates on the Mt. Vernon Memorial Highway, overlook- ing the Potomac River. Luncheon— Tea— Dinner Table de’Hote and A la Carte Service Sunday Morping Breakfdst Phone Alexandsia 2683 - orders. (Main Floor. The Hecht Co.) HUNDREDS OF UN

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