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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1933. [HICAGO PROCEEDS WITH SCHOOL CUTS Teachers, Pupils and Parents Gird for Battle Over Retrenchment. , July 19.—A week of sharp in court and outside, ¢ as the battle over Chi- educational system took on a d more serious aspect, with the cement yesterday of a $5.000,- ment program. calling for e of teachers, elimi- partments and restrictions 70's pupils and parents began es for a battle to com- reseind its action board's economy back to the little orate edu- ehow fre- sever aches s formulated plans for rd’s move, wited “‘come sued several statements would stand by 12 when the | t and rously the interests of g other things: ) nearly 1400 school em- ployes, mo chers; abolition of the Junior high schools; no more purchase musical instruments; ,no more pur- e of textbooks, pending inventory, and discontinuance of bath rooms “ex- cept where deemed essential.” In short. president of the board, James B. McCahey cxplained, elimjna- tlon of “fads and frills Allan Carter, counsel for the Chicago Principals’ Club. announced legal action | against the trustees would probably be instituted, but he declined to say what would be the course of action ne of attack, leaders of the pointed out, would be an in- restraining the board from carrying out its program on the ground it violated the tenure of office clause of the school law. Merely Abolish Jobs. After passing examinations and pro- baticnary ds, teachers can be re- moved only by charges of immorality, proved before the school board. Board members, welcoming a court test, 1z indicating they n ay: They had 1 abolished some I t President McCahey issued a statement explaining the economy measure was directed against “‘pinochle pedagogues, “We are eliminating soft jobs,” he said. “We found there were five or more athletic ructors on the pay roll at on: ol, working perhaps two o a d nd playing pinochle the rest of the time.” board of education signed a declaring the action was an alternative to closing the edit was exhausted, or s’ salaries. approximately $22,- rears in pay. PLAN BARBECUE Tau Deltas Plan Outing Near La Plata. 1 members of the Delta Tau Delta playing™ Farm, 3 miles this Plata, Md. where they will be guests of Leonard Snider. Fishing and other water sports are among the enter- tainment features. A motor caravan will leave the fraternity house, 152¢ K street, at 1:30 pm RESIGNATION REJECTED BUENOS AIRES, Argentina. July 19 () —Alberto Hueyo, minister of finance, offered his resignation to President Augustin P. Justo Monday night, but the executive did not immediately ac- cept it and asked him to reconsider. Unofficiz the resignation was said to be due to the budgetary situation and opposition by Hueyo to contin- ents on the foreign debt as said in usually well inform that a difference of opinio 1 in the cabinet con- cerning the trade agreemcnt recently reached with Great Britain ic Coming to U. S. RUMANIAN PRINCE TO STUDY AVIATION. - UHDERWOO T PRINCE NICHOLAS. BUCHAREST, Rumania, July 19 (®). —Prince Nicholas, younger brother of King Carol, it was announced offi- clally yesterday, will sail early in Au-| gust to the United States to visit avia tion centers there. The prince will re- turn to Rumania in September. BEAUTY JUDGES NAMED Four of Group Chosen to Select Miss District of Columbia. Armand T. Nichols, director general of the Atlantic City Pageant of Beauty; Emile Beauvais, 1221 Connecticut ave- nue; Mrs. Julia Crandall, 819 Eight- eenth street, and Howard W. Berry, for- mer president of the Washington Ad- vertising Club, are four of the seven judges who will select Miss District of | Columbia at a beauty contest at Chevy Chase Lake July 26 and 28. Miss Dis- trict of Columbia will compete for na- tional honors at the Atlantic City con- test. The other three judges are to be named later. [emem o i | HISTORIC NOVA SCOTIA FOR 2 WEEKS INCLUDING FARE AND BERTH AND TWO DAYS AT SEA Rail fares and hotel rates are down to the lowest levels in a decade—Canada this year offers more for your vaca- tion dollar than ever before. $102.50 is the cost of a two weeks vacation in Nova Scotia—price includes rail fare both ways, lower berth where neces- sary, and board and lodging. Nova Scotia offers real vacation variety —warm, sunny beaches and charming seacoast towns, sparkling lakes and streams in the solitude of fragrant forests, romantic legends of the Evan- geline Country. Swimming, splendid sale and fresh water fishing, golf, VETERAS RELIEF BOARD DUE SOON First of Groups torBe Set Up This Week Probably, Ad- ministration Says. By the Assoclated Press. ‘The first of the special boards to review claims of veterans to whom money is paid under the legal pre- sumption that their injuries resulted from wartime duty probably will be established this week. Veterans’ Administration hopeful that most of the boards could be set up and functioning by August 1, told newspaper men that at the moment the creation of the agencies was up to President Roosevelt, who will appoint the members. boards a list of several thousand names has been sent to President Roosevelt. Each board will have three civilian members and two from the Veterans' Administration to review the cac-s of hese veterans. pensation payments were allowed orig- inally under a law of 1924 providing that for certain diseases it should be presumed they originated in service. The economy law reduces the pay- ments tc 75 per cent and provides until October 31 for the boards to review the cases and determine whether the veteran shall continue to be classified as having a disability of service origin ‘There are about 150,000 veterans in this classification. b ot Bl St Bt Be Re B et ] For Those Who Prefer Quality ) and vears of experience in I * scaping work Our _trees. shrubs, evergreens. ete. a d- es, resonally selected for beauty ity No order too small to receive our personal attention! Visit our nursery. HYATTSVILLE NURSERY OAKWOOD RD. Phone. creenwooD 2214 S e [RL T S S SR R g S boating and tennis. Write for details stating type of country and sports you prefer. Save this ad as a reminder. A MONTH COSTS ONLY $145.50 CANADIAN NATIONAL 1o Loeryywhere in Canade GEO. L. BRYSON District Passenger Agent, 922 15th St., N.W., Southern Rwy. Bldg. WASHINGTON, D.C. Telephone National 2333 Everything in Hardware and Paints SAVE More, at Peoples SPEC TAL! Bamboo Lawn Rakes. . . . Resvlarly 19¢ Grass Shears .o 7ue .. Regularly 50C @® Both 48c © BEER Budweiser 2/29c¢ Case $3.15 Rennsylvania 3/24¢ Case $1.90 12 other brands Free Delivery Iron Cords, 14c¢ Complete with Bake- lite iron plug and non- shorting coil spring. Flashlights 2 cell 25¢ - Flare head. 300 ft. range 39¢ Focussm_g type. 500 ft. range 89c 3-in. reflector. 1500 ft. range 5-cell as illustrated. 98¢ Batteries 4c ea. | TR A, . 1 ¢ ol Mystic Cleaner 39c 1b. 3 for $1.00 A powder that cleans and bleaches floors act M emotes paint, varnish &7 Shetiac. in’one operation. . Will Not Injure Your Skin! All-in-One Liquid Wax, 16-0z. bot., 25¢ A superior polish for auto or furniture Peoples Hardware Stores 13 Convenient Stores— FREE DELIVERY Call Nearest Store, or Columbia 9318—Cleve. 9892 Lincoln 4044—Metro. 7889 15th & H Sts. N Colmar Manor, Md. 2475 18th St. 711 7th St. NW. 3655 Georgia Ave. 1311 %th St. N.W. Mount Rainier, Md. 3511 Conn. Ave. N.W. W. 2101 R. L Ave. N.E. 813 H St. N.E. 5021 Conn. Ave. N.W. 1826 Bladensburg Road 3169 Mt.Pleasant St.N.W. STORE HOURS: 7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.—Saturdays until 10 p.m. offictals, | To fill the places on the 60 to 90| They are classified as | “‘presumptive cases” because their com- | COME TO TEACHER’S AID |Five Young Men at Western Peti- tion President for Mrs. Page Kirk. Five young men, students at Western | High School, petitioned President | Roosevelt yesterday in behalf of Mrs. drawing department of that school, | ployed in the Geological Survey. | % group left the petition with Marvin H. Mcintyre, one of the President’s sec- | retaries, who gave assurance he would | see that the President received it and | | answered it. With young Hendricks | | were Meade Lehman, Frank Del Monte, William Osgood and Gibson Davis. | mechanical drawing department wit! {out any instructor, and will make it| impossible for a large body of studen's to continue their course of instruction.” - . Purchases Drug Bulletin. i CHICAGO, July 19 (#)—Purchase of | the Drug Bulletin, drug trade journal, | | by J. D. Spurrier of Cleveland was | announced yesterday. Offices of the paper have been moved to Cleveland. Th;u'sday Friday Reading or Distance Toric Lenses—High-Bridee Frames—Regular Price, ve 50% to 60% HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS |SUSPECT CAPTURED. IN MARYLAND KILLING Unidentified Man Seized by West Virginia Police in Hancock Shooting. Page Kirk, head of the mechanical | Special Dispatch to The Star, HAGERSTOWN, Md., July 19.—An who was compelled to resign recently | unidentified man, believed to be the because her husband is a scientist em- | one who shot Henry Lee, 40-year-old armer, through the heart from am- Headed by Walter F. Hendricks, the | bush in front of his home near Han- | cock Sunday, was shot and captured Feel Tired, Lack Energy? It was stated in the petition that| You need a good tonic to stimulate your ap- Mrs. Kirk's resignation “will leave the | petite and increase your vitality. For more | than a quarter of a century Nutraven has i helped thousands of rundown people to regain a strong, healthy body. A tonic of recognized value in building up the system. Pleasant to take. Contains only purest in- gredients. Don't trifie with your health. Get a generous bottle of Nutraven for $1 today at Peoples Drug Storey, NUTRAVEN, a Nutritive Tonic On the Cost of Your Glasses s12 Special for THURSDAY and FRIDAY ONLY, $5.00 Kryptok Invisible Bifocal Lenses (Far Special for THURSDAY Highest standard quality Eighteen years' practice assures NOTE—Rerul; Thursday an Registerea optometrist DR, W. 312 McGill Building 908.914 G St. N.W, Syepight and Near Vision)—I ~d-FRIDAY ONLY, $7.50 M. to 6 gular_Price, $15 of optical glass used. the proper eye examination ar_fee for examination will be omitted d Friday—Consult me without obligation. Located 18 Years in McGill Building F.FINN Specialist P.M. ® ABOVE—ARTHUR J. NEU, of East Orange, N. J., pulls in a nice one! Few men know the importance of healthy nerves better than Art Neu does. He is national champion in dry-fly casting for accuracy. Just as a stunt, Mr. Neu has frequently flicked the ash off a friend’s cigarette with a fly at 35 feet! Steady Smokers turn to Camels ArtHUR J. NEU, champion fly-caster, says: “Dry-fly fishing is a delicate art that takes the best a man’s got in steadiness of hand and eye. To win the championship in accuracy at casting a dry fly, l 1 f T IChlrles Barnhart in the woods between | Waterway Offices Opened. Berkeley Springs yesterday. the West Virginia resort town and Sir | CHICAGO, July 19 (#)—The Great The object of a police search in three | Jchn Run. He leveled his rifle at the | pakes-St. Lawrence Tidewater Associa- States since Lee was killed as he{nfilcer‘ but Barnhart shot him through | tion opened offices in Chicago yesterday, alighted from his car, the suspect was | the arm before he was able to fire, ac- | yith brought. to the public square fn Berke- | cording (o pollce, The suspect, How- | pnd oer siaas ooor. ooy OBl ley Springs and surrounded by a crowd | ever, turned and sought to escape 304 Col. Sidney Story, cago, in of persons as police guarded him until | through the woods and State police charge. Officers in a statement said an ambulance arrived to take him to | shct him again and captured him. He preliminary work on construction de- a hospital. was brought to Berkeley Springs un- | tails for the St. Lawrence waterway may begin this month. by West Virginia State Police near The man was cornered by Constable | conscious from a wound in the side. Souvenirs for the children ... Special Menus for the whole family THURSDAY NOON Ewart’s Sandwiches ............... siraieniese e l0CH & S 1Se Ewart’s Sandwich Plates . Roast Beef Plate Lunch . (with two vegetables THURSDAY NIGHT Fried Chicken Plate . . (Including fried chicken, potatocs, tomatoes and toast COSRR EWART’S CAFETERIA 522 13th St. N.W., New Brownley Bldg., 13th and F When in Rickmond Visit Us at 112 N. 5th St (Opp. Johw Marshall Hotel) 12 degrees below street temperature at all times Copyright, 1933, B. J. Beynolds Tobacco Company ® ABOVE— MILDNESS COMES FIRST in a cigarette, according to Mr. Neu, for enjoyment and for the sake of your nerves. Camel’s rich, inviting flavor always seems to say, ‘‘Have another.” ORIGHT—A DAY’S SPORT is more enjoyable with plenty of Camels along, because you can smoke all you want —and still be ready for more when evening comes! Camel’s costlier tobaccos never get on your nerves...never tire your taste! Camels are better for steady smoking. It is more fun to know! A MATCHLESS BLEND / I had to have healthy nerves. And yet I smoke steadily—all I want to— without disturbing my nerves. That’s because I prefer Camels. There is So begin today! no question but that they are milder. And their rich, inviting flavor seems to say, ‘Have another.’ ” Turn to Camels. Like Mr. Neu you will find that Camels are milder...that their flavor suits your taste ...that steady smoking never jangles your nerves. S Wi N \ IT IS MORE FUN TO KNOW Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. The more you smoke them, the more you’ll like them. Costlier robaccos do taste better. NEVER TIRE YOUR TASIE. .