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s high for old. e 1004. F 8. Repair Parts For Furnaces and Stoves Almost All Makes During the rush period of Novem- ber it is impossible to take stove repair orders by telephone. Fries, Beall and Sharp 734 10th St. NN\W. Natl. 1964 T0 CHICAGD BY TELEPHONE AFTER 8:30 B.M. STATION-TO-STATION CALL PIERRETTE CONN. AVE. AT QUE Come, join the fun at the Pierrette Thanksgiving Party Wednesday, Thanksgiving Eve, 5 to 10 P.ML Confetti, Favors Don’t hesitate to call us for small orders of Lumber and Millwork If you need just a small quantity of lumber or mill- work, come in or phone us. We specialize in small orders. Free delivery in any amount. Call Mr. Jack now. Ask for an estimate on remodeling. Mr. Jack will give you prompt, sersonal attention. AL LUMBER—MILLWORK 2121_Georgia Avenue NORTH 1311 4l Fares are Round Trip L] . . . O ———— $3.50 New York wark, Elizabeth, Plaini Sunday, Dee. 2nd, Lv. 12.01 a.m. and .00 a.m. $3.00 Philadelphia $2.75 Wilmington Thursday, Nov. 29, 8:00 a. m. and 11:30 2. m, 3.00 Chester Lv. 8.00 a.m. only $5.65 to New York - One Way Every Night Philadelphia $:3.10 Wilmington & Air Conditioned Reclining Se: Open Union Station 10 p.m. Lv Euer& Week End | Round trip fares reduced E-THIRD be. Pride an) 00n to Sundsy moon. p to Mondsy midnight. mit over THANKSGIVING Leave from Nov. 28 to Dee. & Retura up to Dec. 3. For Details Ask Agents or Phowe Dist. 3300—Nat. 7370 MORE £ 0HI0 RR ‘Here's How to Enjoy . a Drink! SUBURBAN CLUB Pale Dry Ginger Ale Dinner Size Now 10c Made in Washington 1310 Ridge Place S.E. Llincoln 0243 tracted its action abolishing the royal He marched down MRS. VANDERBILT RESTING AT HOTEL Central Figure in Fight for Daughter’s Custody Stays in Seclusion. Determined to gain the rest for | which she came to Washington, Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, ‘flgurs in a recent sensational court {battle over custody of her heiress- | daughiter Gloria, this morning was in | seclusion in her suite at the Mayflower Hotel. Telephone calls to her suite were in- tercepted by a special operator and relayed to a maid. who explained, kindly but firmly, that Mrs. Vander- bilt was not to be disturbed. Plans Return to Gotham. Met by reporters and photographers last night, Mrs. Vanderbilt explained that she would remain here through Thursday. She plans to return to New York to be present when her attorney, Nathan Burkan, presents a writ of mandamus asking that Judge John F. Carew clarify the decision by which the 10-year-old Gloria was given into custody of her aunt, Mrs. H. P. Wi 3 Mrs. Vanderbilt disclosed that she will not take advantage of Judge arew’s ruling that Gloria might spend her week ends with her mother, Attorney Burkan having advised that | such acceptance of privilege might endanger her chances of successfully appealing the custody decision. Questioned about aspects and per- in the recent trial, Mrs. i 1t declined ment in all | except one instance, that concern- ing Mrs. Emma Keislich, the nurse whose testimony dealt with the moth- |er's private li Of Mrs. Keislich, i the mother declared spiritedly that |she “would give everything to have | that woman out of my child's en- | vironment.” ‘ Met By Sister. Mrs. Vanderbilt was accompanied { from New York by a maid, the couple | traveling in a drawing room on one (of the New York-Washington presses. Upon arrival at the May- flower last night she was met by her Mrs. Benjamin Thaw, who is | remaining with her at the hotel. The period of rest was prescribed for Mrs. Vanderbilt by her physician, particularly if she is to follow her announced plan of continuing her court fight to regain custody of Gloria. In the event she is successful, Mrs Vanderbilt said she would make her permanent residence in New York rather than return to Paris, where she has lived for several years. FORMER ATTACHE TO DISCUSS RUSSIA { W. Chapin Huntington Will swer Questions at All Souls’ Church Forum. W. Chapin Huntington, former | commercial attache at the American | Embassy, Petrograd, Russia, will an- swer questions on Russia at the round - table ish hall Souls’ Church Episcopal December 3 at 8:15 pm. Several new col- ored Sovict posters will be displayed Huntington will be cross-questioned by Miss Anne Car- ter Greene, re- cent viritor to Soviet Russia, and by Dion S. Birney, a Washirgton at- torney. Facts about life in the Soviet Union today: marriage, divorce, the home, religion, educational and entertain- ment facilities and Russia's relations with (oreign countries will be brought out in the discussion. The public is invited. SHIPPING CONTROL BY I.C.C. IS FOUGHT Death of Inland Waterways Is Seen in Plan by Mississippi Valley Group Head. W. C. Huntington. By the Associated Press. ST. LOUIS, November 27.—Control of shipping by the Interstate Com- merce Commission, long advocated by Federal Transportation Co-ordinator Joseph B. Eastman, “will kill inland waterways.” the Mississippi Valley Association was told by its president yestercay. Eastman’s plan, reiterated by him at yesterday's opening session of the sisteenth ymual meeting of the associ- ation, bréught immediate opposition from Robert Isham Randolph. Chicago. association president, and other speakers. In opening his address yesterday Eastman said, “The thesis which I am going to undertake to defend here is Federal regulation of all important forms of transportation, including water carriers and their port-to-port rates, by the Interstate Commerce Commission.” Randolph in his reply also said: “We believe that the shipper and the ultimate consumer are entitled to the free and unrestricted use of the public highways and the transportation of goods at the lowest cost commensu- rate with the character of the service.” SIAMESE ROYAL HOUSE SHIPS 2 AUTOS TO KING Pradjadhipok Believed Prolong- ing Stay Abroad, With Adbi- cation More Certain. By the Associated Press. BANGKOK, Siam, November 27.— The ministry of the royal household is shipping two big automobiles from the royal garage to King Prajadhipok in London, it was revealed yesterday. This was generally believed to indi- cate the monarch proposes to prolong his stay abroad, with the probability of abandoning his decision to abdicate becoming more remote than ever. The Siamese capital meanwhile was calmly awaiting a government an- nouncement on the subject, while the government on its part was providing the masses with plentiful entertain- ment. Public lotteries and other diver- sions were announced. Prajadhipok recently threatened to abdicate unless the government re- ————————— S20Cton {or death penalties. [} 4 central | ex- | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO D. C, TUESDAY, NOV Married 42 Years After Romance Began lived in Winfield, Kans. the ceremony today. and Justice Letts. ’ice and Beck once. Lewis S. Beck. a night watchman at the District Supreme Court, is shown above as he was married this morning to Mrs. Nelle Towne, a former childhood sweetheart, whom he courted 42 yvears ago when they both She has since been married Left to right: William Whetmore, a witness; Mrs. Beck, who is 59; Mr. Beck, who is 62, Justice Dickinson Letts performed —Star Staff Photo. BY GENEVIEVE FORBES HERRICK. ACK GARNER, breaking his old | J Texas custom of never leaving | Uvalde until just a few days | before the bell rings for work on Capitol Hill, is coming to | Washington for the gridiron dinner, December 8. to see himself—and other Government officials—as the newspaper men see them. He's not the only one coming back ‘ to a party. The ladies, too, are arriving in town early. All because Mrs. Roosevelt is giving her “dove party"—with the gals all in costume, else they can't get in —on the same night that the men go | to the gridiron dinner. A Met Edith Nourse Rogers, fluffy- haired Republican Representative from Massachusetts, in a tea room the other noon. Just a fleeting visit, she | said. | “Good-by until January,” I good= | byed. “Not at all” she replied, “I'm coming back for Mrs. Roosevell's masquerade; wouldn’t miss it for | anything.” Wrat will she wear? secret. A secret, too, what most of the guests are to represent. Report from the costumers indicates that Wash- ington women are no different from women the country over—most of them yearn to be Cleopatra, Mae West, or a Spanish dancer with a | rose 'in the teeth. Many of them will, too, I fear. And a generous quota | of Dolly Madisons. Greatest speculations—what will Florence Kahn, witty Representative from California (a Republican who came through in a hard fight) wear? The betting is heavy that she’ll take a prize. That's @ | | Frances Perkins is spending every | moment she can away from her job, in the hospital room of Mary Rum- sey, who is lald up with a painful hip fracture, four fractured ribs, received in a spill from her horse. The two women, superficially so different, share the same house, many of the same views. | The Secretary of the Navy, true to the tradition of his sex, isn't | crazy about ladies’ tea parties. But the other afternoon when his wife entertained the mewspaperwomen, lo, the tall Virginia gentleman ap- peared in the receiving line. Seemed to enjoy himself, too. When her husband is on the job & diplomat’s spouse dare not talk overly {much about her pets or prejudices in the land of her husband’s post. haps it's because the Greek minister, Charalambos Simopoulos, popular here for 15 years, is leaving presently for | 2 new post in London that his sprightly | wife (who does know how to wear black—so many women don't) recently declared that of all the cabinet wives she has known during her stay in Washington, Mrs. Cordell Hull, wife of the present Secretary of State, stands out with particular charm. Mrs. Hull, know, is described as her husband’s “‘shadow,” tall and slim, | she has consistently refused to hold | any office in any organization. She won't make a speech. But she does make friends. Mrs. Henry Wallace, wife of the Secretary of Agriculture, is the only | college sorority woman in the cabinet | circle. She’s a Delta Delta Delta. The | tri-delts, celebrating the forty-sixth | anniversary of the sorority’s founding, | gave a dinner in her honor a few days ago. Anna Roosevelt Dall is an Alpha Phi. Betsy Dern, daughter of the | Secretary of War, is a Pi Beta Phi. That's the same sorority to which Mrs. Coolidge belongs. It's a Pi Phi arrow on her salmon-colored velvet gown over on the waz fig- urine at the Smithsonian Institu- tion. Recently a lot of talk about the arrow is pointing in the wrong direction. Mrs. Hoover is a Kappa Kappa Gamma. So was “Lemonade Lucy” Hayes. Ruth Bryan Owen, our Minister to Demmark, is @ Delta Gamma. A couple of lads, attending the school for candidates for the Department of Justice's investigating division while | wandering around the corridors of the new Justice Building the other after- noon, almost ran into a tall man. The tall man, when he caught his breath, inquired if there was anything he could do for the boys. i They said there surely was—they'd like to take a peak at the Attorney General's private office; were wonder= ing how to do it. The tall man said he’d help them. the corridor, through an ante-room, and flung A In Capital Letters Garner to Break Custom by Leaving Home in Texas| Early to Attend Dinner Given by Gridiron Club. | Per- | —— open the door to panelled ofice of the A. G. “Take a good look” the guide counseled. Even showed the fel- lows certain things of interest. Then bowed them out courteously. Their host, though they probably will never know it, was Homer Cum- mings, the Attorney General, in person. (Copyright. 19:4. by the North American American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) GEORGETOWN LAW PROFESSOR DEAD J. D. Sullivan Well-Known Attorney—Funeral Rites | Tomorrow. | Joseph D. Sullivan, well known at- torney and law professor at George- town University, died yesterday at Georgetown University Hospital. Mr. Sullivan, who lived at 1849 Vernon street, was an authority on real prop- erty and had written extensively upon that subject as well ag lectured on it at Georgetown. 1 The son of the late Thomas J. Sul- livan, for many years director of the | Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Mr. Sullivan attended Georgetcwn Prepatory School and graduated from Georgetown University in 1897. He received the degree of LL. D. last year from the university, During 35 years of practice here, he nad taken a part in the litigation over the ownership of the Anacostia | marshlands above Benning Bridge and also represented large interests in connection with the Government's purchase of lands for Anacostia Park and the National Arboretum Active in civic and cheritable af- fairs, he was for a long time secre- tary of the Catholic Charities and president of the Catholic Home Bureau for Dependent Children. He | was & member of the Rotary Club and the Phi Sigma Kappa and Delta Theta Phi Fraternities. Surviving _are his mother, Mrs. Thomas J. Sullivan: his sister, Miss Mary E. Sullivan, anc his brother, Francis P. Sullivan. Funeral services will bhe held at St. Paul's Church, Fifteenth and V streets, tomorrow at 10 am. Exchange Club to Meet. The regular weekly luncheon of the Exchange Club will be held at the University Club at 12:30 p.m. to- morrow. Maurice J. Colbert will preside. Shop Early Make up your Christmas Bud- get now and do your shopping $540 84 $1,200 $100.00 $6,000 $500.00 It is not necessary to have had an Ac- count at this Bank to Borrow. THE MORRIS PLAN BANK Under Supervision U. S. Treasury 1408 H STREET, N. W. NEW DEAL PLAK SOUEHTBY BARDD Manufacturers’ Roosevelt Objectives. Secking the basis for an effectively planned co-operation between indus- and the administration, C. L. president of Association, has ap- pealed to President Roosevelt for a further statement of New Deal ob- jectives. The administration, Mr. Bardo said, “must project a course that can actually be followed.” Upon such a course, industralists are hoping to formuate a “platform for American industry,” the plan to be evolved at a business meeting scheduled in New York on December 5 under the auspices of the Manu- facturers’ Association Coincident with this appeal, the ess world and the administration vesterday harkened to several indi- cations of improving conditions throughout the country. From the Commerce Department came a report that American export business for October reached its high- est total since April, 1931 was $208,352,000 as compared with imports of $129.629 000, producing a $76, .000 balance of trade in favor of the United States. 55-POUND WOMAN ASKS $100,000 IN LOVE SUIT By the Associated Press NEW YORK, November 27.—A 55- pound midget has filed a full-size breach of promise suit in Supreme Court. Papers in a $100.000 action brought by Anne Sutton, who is 39 inches tall, against Andrew Murphy, jr.. 5 feet tall, were disclosed yesterday. The Lilipu- tian charged seduction. try Bardo, Manufacturers’ Miss Sutton said that they met last | Spring and that she promised to marry | Murphy after she had completed an engagement at the World Fair. Her alleged suitor was so persistent, she said, that she relinquished all her former friendships, only to learn later that he was already married. Overcoats President | Seeks Further Statement on | BER 27, 1934. REAL FOLSOM SITE LOCATED INWEST Wraithlike Man of Glacier’s Time Emerges as Tan- gible Being. (Continued From First Page.) pastures which sprang up around the streams flowing from the ends of the | melting glaciers. If tuch an animal had been killed by human beings in New Mexico it woyld indicate the existence of men ) on the continent at least during the latter stages of the ice age—a date| considerably earlier than is ordinarily accepted for the habitation of the New World. There was, of course, the bare possibility that the IIIDCII-! tion of arrow heads and bones may | have been accidental. Since then the Folsom points have been appearing over most of the coun- try—but always as single specimens. A’few months ago David I. Bushnell, Jr., of the Smithsonian Institution ob- tained some from the neighborhood of Orange, Va. He believed they were not originally intended as arrow heads, but as a sort of primitive kitchen im- plement. But never was there any! indication of the men who used the| curious, exquisitely chipped bits of flint. Followed Glaciers. In the West Folsom points were found in association with the bones of unquestionably ice-age animals— mammoths and musk oxen. One is long since extinct. The other, within the m>mory of man, has not ventured below the Arctic Circle. Both are known to have grazed in the van of the retreating ice. Dr. Roberts was sent out by the Smithsonian Institution last month to investigate a report that a consider- able number of these Folsom points had been picked up on & farm in the foothills of the Rockies, the location of which is being kept secret for the time being. Specimens sent here were | undoubtedly genuine. Exploration of | the surrounding country soon revealed | the National | The figure | what must have been a definite dwell- | ing place of the mysterious people— | possibly a camping site used by vari- | ous hunting parties over a long period, | or possibly a workshop where their | characteristic “tools” were manufac- tured. Thirty characteristic Folsom | points, some showing the finest crafts- manship of any yet discovered, were obtained. Besides these there were a great variety of scrapers, rough stone knife blades, drills, stone engraving | implements probably used to carve | designs on bones, drills and hammer- | stones. All the animal bones found had been broken and the marrow | scraped out of them. The bones have not been studied. as yet. They will be turned over to National Museum experts for identification. Whatever | these animals may have been. the an- clent people were undoubtedly con- temporaneous with them. i The site covers about a quarter of a mile in radius. The date of the deposit is difficult to determine but | it can hardly have been much later | than Pleistocene, or ice age. It is| certainly very ancient relative to other human deposits in North | America. Was Lush Pasture. Apparently at the time it was occu- pied, it was & lush pasture where | | probably great herds of Pleistocene quadrupeds congregated. ‘This would make it & favorite site for a camp | of roaming hunters and such—all evi- | dence indicates—was what the Fol- | som men were. They presumably | | kept on the outskirts of the grazing | herds, picking off animals which strayed away from the main body or who became disabled or mired. i Moreover, all the materials Folsom | man needed for his weapons and | tools, great nodules of flint, were | there in abundance. It was un- doubtedly at least a temporary work- | shop. Dr. Roberts found flakes of | flint chipped off in making the arti- facts Only a small part of the deposit has been excavated. Thus far no| skeletal material has been found which would indicate what sort of a man, physically, the Folsom hunter | was. Presumably he was ancestrally | | related to the Indians. are just the ‘opposite’ raglans 1t’s perfectly natural that ‘RAGLAN’ should go with ‘CGHESTY . ..the wider shoulders and fuller chests in Chesty Suits call for an easy fitting shoul- der in an Over- coat...and the RAGLAN has been elected by Kuppenheimer$45 GROSNER You'll find the RAG- LAN OVERCOATS in just the ROUGH FABRICS you'd ex- pect for a style that’s so easy going . . . the sweep of the coat makes itaperfect style for walking and ‘driving.’ of 1325 F Street 4 On a Friendly Footing with Men of Taste— Florsheims Most Styles )j‘ 8 75 Some Styles, §10 'HE harder a man is to please—the easier it is to sell him a pair of Flor- sheim Shoes! They have that indefinable something which we call “good taste” and they’re at ease in any situation—at the foot ball classics, in the office, around the exclusive clubs. And “more miles per dollar” makes them a positive economy! The Right Note in a DRESS OXFORDS FOR DANCING $5.00 Plain-toe patent leather oxfords that are just about the best dancing partners vour feet ever had! “Hahn Special” values! 14th Tth *Open Nights #3212 14th Farly Christmas Shopping means com- plete assortments. We are ready for you now. omfort and Class are combined in Richard Prince Our “Custom-Like” Overcoats Selected cloths—<chosen for their smart char- acter as well as their warmth—and fashioned into distinctive garments. So many charm- ing styles your individual fancy will be sat- isfied—and your judgment gratified at the quality for the price: Single and double- breasted; also Ulsterettes—and dressy Ches- terfields with velvet collar. $20.50 Richard Prince | Richard Prince Worsted Suits —single and double breasted $34.50 Military Patch Suits— in rough weaves $29.50 Smart Finchley Hats Wear Mark Cross Pig-tex Gloves | . —in young men's blocks— —because they are O. K. in| that mature men like. Ex- fashion. Exclusively here | clusively here 52_29 H 5.00 You can charge it—on a 30-day settlement basis; or our Convenient 12-Payment Plan The Mode—F at Eleventh ? Fa