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FIRST LADY OFFERS JOBLESS AID PLAN Will Outline Program for Home Town Tomor- row Night. By the Assoclated Press. HYDE PARK, N. Y, February 8.— Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will pre- sent to the neighbors of her home town tomorrow night a plan for eliminating unemployment with local industries, Details of the program are un- known here. In general, however, it is understood that Mrs. Rooseveit will suggest an expansion of the idea embodied in her Val Kill factory and encouragement of the weaving operations of Mrs. Nellle Johannes- sen, whose home-woven woolens have been purchased by the President, his wife and their friends. Mrs. Roosevelt last December in- troduced & plan to replace the “Dutch feudalism” of the Hudson Valley, which she said was declining, with local industries. On January 12 a mass meeting was held and Walter Gilbert, town supervisor, named a committee to study Hyde Park un- employment. The committee de- clined to discuss the Roosevelt plan but said it had amassed statistics on unemployment. Gilbert, a Republican and frankly skeptical of the establishment of local industries, said there were about 400 unemployed in a population of 3,000. Sixty families are on relief, he de- clared. Mrs. Roosevelt said she believed the unemployment situation in Hud- son County was due in some measure to the decline of the “old Dutch lord-of-manor spirit.” Estates were closed and servants and caretakers thrown out of work. Gilbert disputes this theory. CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Special meeting to consider forma- tion of auxiliary unit, United States Treasury Post. No. 35 American Legion, Willard Hotel, 8 p.m. Card party, benefit St. Francis de Sales Church, auditorium, Twentieth street and Rhode Island avenue northeast, 8:30 p.m. Dance, George ge Washington Uni- versity, Shoreham Hotel, 10 p.m. Bingo party, benefit Blessed Virgin's Sodality of Our Lady of Victory Church, Conduit and Reservoir roads, 8 pm. Card party, benefit H Street Chris- tion Church, 60 M street northeast, 8 pm. Dance, Alumni Association of Oxon Hill High School, auditorium, 9 p.m. Dance, Phi Mu Sorority, Lafayette Hotel, 9 pm. Card party and dance, William F. Hunt Chapter, O. E. S., Willard Hotel. 8:30 pm. Smoker, Variety Club, Willard Hotel, ® pm. Ball, Catholic Students M!sskm} Crusade, Mayflower Hotel, 8 p.m. Card party, benefit Women's Auxil- fary, No. 13, to Columbia Typograph- ical Union, No. 101, 1219 G street, 8:30 p.m. Dinner, Washington Academy of Surgeons, University Club, 7 p.m. Georgetown University Wardman Park Dance, Junior Promenade, Hotel, 10 p.m. Dr. William Russell, St. North Capitol and T Lecture, Martin's Hall, streets, 8 p.m. Lecture, “The Heart Judgment,” by Theadore Heline, League for the Larger Life, 1414 Sixteenth street, 8 pm. Ball, Unity Chapter, No. 22, 0.E. 8., celebrating 18th birthday of organ- {zation, Masonic Temple, Thirteenth street and New York avenue, 8 pm. TOMORROW. Dance, Young Democratic Club, Carlton Hotel, 9 p.m. Tea dance, Georgetown University. ‘Wardman Park Hotel, 4 p.m. Dinner dance, Tota Sigma Upsilon | Borority, Shoreham Hotel, 7:30 p.m. Dance, Miriam Chapter, O. E. 8., ‘Willard Hotel, 9 p.m. Dance, Kappa Delta Phi Sorority, Hamilton Hotel, 9:30 p.m. i e AT i Franchise Extended. Both men and women of Turkey may now vote when they reach 23. Births Reported. Samuel and Reba Stein. boy. Hubert B. and Billie G. 8 Arno K. and Katherine Gebhardt. Chu!tr A. and Arabella P. Hagentogler. H:rry and Evelyn J. Nlchnlwn wirl. Harlie B. and, Madge Morse, gil. Elgar C. 'and Alice A. Mead 20l Piosaie, Purvis, etrl. William: H. and Theima L. McDowell. girl. Gerald W. ‘and Anne W. Stiiwell. ‘my Ralph C. ‘and Alice J. Bradburn. boy. Harvey A. and Elizabeth M. Jones, boy. William H. and Julianna Keefer. boy. Elmer H. and Elizabeth Cheseldine. boy. Charles L. and Rose L. Santmyer. boy. Robert G. and Elethea F. McKee. girl. John I and Mary V. Bryan. eirl, Alphonse H. and Clara tourneau. girl. Winslow 8. and !:Ilzlbeth 'Mclver irl. Page Johnzon, ohn azd onnson. gl 5 uby feiribach, eir Daniel O. d Elva_Neall. boy. ” William lnd Anna Rust. boy. Willlam J. and Eunice C. Hill, girl. Fmmett and Christine Graves. boy. FARENGION GAS LGNT CO ® GIOBGLTOWN GAS LIGHT CO ’ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1935. s A—I5 Planning Shrine Convention RACEBASISIND. Plans to raise $150,000 as a guaranty fund for the Shrine Convention here in June were outlined at the first meeting of the Shrine Finance Com- mittee yesterday. A letter asking for subscriptions already has been sent out to business/men and others in the city, and the committee will follow these with personal appeals next week. They predict business stimulation incident to the convention will more than repay the guaranty fund sub- scribers. Shown here, left to right, are Thomas Jarrel, treasurer of the committee; Francis G. Addison, jr., chairman, and Robert P. Smith, di- rector general of the convention. Horace G. Smithy is standing. —=Star Staff Photo. Kreisler Admits Authorship Of 14 Dead Masters’ Classics Device Was Adopted lo? Keep From Repeating Name on Program. Music Lecturer’s Search for Manuscript Brings Secret Into Open. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, February 8.—Fourteen compositions which for 30 years have been attributed to composers of Lhe1 seventeenth and eighteenth centuries have been disclosed by Fritz Kreisler as original works of his own. The famous violinist acknowledged in a cablegram from Vienna to the New York Times that he had written a series of compositions which bore | the names of such masters as Vivadli, Couperin, Porpora, Pugnani and Padre Martini and which carried Kreisler's name only as arranger. The composi- tions range from a short encore piece to a large concerto. They are included under the head- ing “Classical Manuscripts” in Kreis- ler's printed works, and in his cable- gram the violinist said they are “in every detail my original compositions, with the. sole exception of the first eight bars of the Couperin ‘Chanson Louis XIII' taken from a traditional melody.” As his reason for crediting the old masters with his own music, Kreisler | said: “Necessity forced this course on me 30 years ago when I was desirous of enlarging my programs. I found it FRITZ KREISLER. for several reasons. ‘The first is Kreisler's consummate musicianship, knowledge and taste, which enabled him to write, and write beautifully, in widely varied styles. The second is that he has in many cases written transcriptions of songs and of instru- mental pieces, very adroitly and effec- tively arranged for the string instru- | ments. To slip by a number of works as those of men long since dead was a simple thing and was received with- out suspicion by the public. and the names of the earlier com- posers to whom Kreisler attributed Vivadll inexpedient and tactless to repeat my .,A di name endlessly on the programs.” This is one reason. The violinist’s friends and publisher have presented |« others. Three decades ago Kreisler was a i young artist of 30. Although he toured the United States when he was 14 and was a famous violinist by the time he was 25, he was not in those days the dominating figure before the public that he is today. Another reason advanced is that Kreisler's colleagues would not have been eager in those days to play the work of a rival and coming virtuoso. It was the easier for Kreisler to adopt these names of old composers and pass off his own music as theirs s - “Ls Chasse. a Caprice Dlllr"dm’( “Sicilienne “Study on a Cho: “Tempo ai Minuetio” The real authorship of the com- positions came about through the in- | R vestigation of a lecturer on music who | wanted to find out what changes Kreisler had made in the Praeludium and Allegro,” ‘“by Pugnani.” works and manuscripts. He went to Kreisler's publisher and the secret came out. When your guests compliment you on your cake baking ability (and it's really a SANICO CAKE), frankly, we can’t blame you much for saying, “Thank you.” SANICO CAKES have been in that position many, many times. It’s a cake that you can serve with the same degree of satisfac- tion and confidence you experi- ence when you serve one of your own. | Site of upe! Padre Martini | but | a1 couldn't find it in Pugnani's printed | J: CRIMES DISPUTED Economic Discrimination Is Blamed in Report to Col- ored Group. An analysis of crime statistics for the District, indicating an economic rather than racial basis for the fact that two-thirds of the juvenile delin- quency cases here are contributed by one-third of the population, was pre- sented to the Advisory Council of Col- ored Organizations last night by Dr. Howard H. Long, assistant superin- tendent of schools. Citing what he termed & deliberate effort to break down the moral fiber of the colored population by exclusion from employment opportunities, Bel- ford V. Lawson pointed out that more than 16,000 colored families were on relief here last May, and only four less up to January 31. . Rev. R. W. Brooks expressed oppo- sition to legislation to broaden the powers of the Commissioners over various phases of the District gov- ernment. Maj. Campbell C. Johnson, who pre- sided at the meeting, held at the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A., was au- thorized to name a commlme to pre- sent these analyses at hearings on crime prevention and increased au- thority for the Commissioners. Among the groups represented at the meeting were the Baptist Minis- terial Alliance, the Federation of Parent-Teacher Associations, the Race Relations Committee of the Federa- tion of Churches, the Federal Em- ployes’ Union, the new Negro Alliance and a number of college and fraternal organizations. UNDERGROUND PARKING IS PROJECTED BY ICKES Federal Surplus Relief Corp. Building Would Be Used for Facilities. Secretary Ickes has come to the res- cue of Interior Department employes by projecting a plan for underground parking facilities sufficient to accom- modate between 700 and 800 automo- biles. The garage will be situated in the square bounded by New York and Vir- ginia avenues, Nineteenth and Twen- tieth streets. The land is owned by the Government and it will be neces- sary to raze temporary bullding No. 2, occupied now by the Federal Surplus | Relief Corp. ‘The garage will be paid for out of the $11,000000 P. W. A. fund pre- viously allocated for a new Interior Department building. It will be com- pleted long before the building is oc- cupied, however, so employes may keep their cars off the streets. e $4,250 VERDICT GIVEN Man Receives Damages From D. C. for Fall in Sidewalk. Winton E. Disney was given a | verdict of $4,250 against the District Following is the list of compositions | government by a jury in District Su- preme Court yesterday. Through Attorneys Henry I. Quinn and Albert E. Esher, the plaintiff . claimed he was seriously injured in 1931 when he fell into a depression in the sidewalk at Georgia avenue and Blair road. Deaths Reported. Harry C. Sioussa. 84, 6000 ch l! Stephen M. Broadbent. Harry C. Wolf. 66, 50 Mary McGill, 64, P o Conduit £a" efice Hospital. 3th st. Homer A. ‘Bonannon, 35, 2650 Wisconstn Chfirlu La Compts. 36, St. Elizabeth's spit Wallace A" Brown. 26. 1701 Park rd. linger Hospital. Plil’mon s 6 N s 2418 Lth t. ith. 54 Gallinge: al. Bertna M. Davis. 36, Galligger Hofip tal Nathaniel Walker. 16, Preedmen’s Hospital {9 DIE IN COLLISION OF TRUCK AND TRAIN 13 Other Ontario Relief Highway Workers Are Injured at Grade Crossing. By the Assoclated Press. FORT WILLIAM, Ontario, Febru- ary 8.—Nine members of a highway construction crew are dead and 13 others are suffering from injuries re- SANITARY-PIGGLY WIGGLY ceived when their motor truck and a Canadian National Rallways train collided at a grade crossing. ‘The accident occurred last night, 10 miles west of here. All the victims were relief workers. The dead are W. Holford, Walter Holowenko and John Adams of Fort Willlam, Thomas McCreery and Steve Petit of Slate River, Ruben Killins of Noalalu, John Hermanson and Toivo Nieme of Wolf Siding and Ernle Pierre of Flint. One of the injured, Roger Rose, was not expected to recover. Raymond Palo, 23, driver of the truck, who was uninjured, is being held by police pending an investiga- tion of the accident. Sweet Potato Stuffing for Crown Roast of Pork 1 qt. hot mashed sweet potatoes Salt White Pepper Nutmeg % cup butter 1% cup shredded orange pulp and julce Season the potato to taste with salt, pepper, and Beat In the butter and the orange pulp and juice, and use as directed. & little nutmeg. 1 large loin of pork Salt Pepper Sweet Potato Stuffing 18th MAN ARRESTED IN HARBORING NELSON By ths Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, February 8.— ‘The round-up of 18 persons indicted for harboring George Nelson, slain near Chicago at the end of a year’s flight from the law, was complete today with Joseph “Fatso” Negri in Federal custody. Arrest of the former convict was disclosed late yesterday when ne was slipped into Federal Judge A. F. St. Sure's court for arraignment. The only comment from United A fortunate purchase per- mits us to offer you this out- standing price on choice pork loin. Whole or half. Leg 0’ Lamb Frying Chickens Prime Rib Roast Whole or “Baby Face” | | Ptates Attorney H. H. McPike was that Negri “came into our custody this morning mn San Francisco.’ Negri is accused of helping to con- ceal Nelson and of driving a stolen automobile from Chicago to San Fran- cisco last November 30. Bail was set at $55,000. SLOY y, Jf"PAI NTS Our booklet. “How to Get the Job You Want.” is full of practical gestions. _Free for the asking. 922N Y. Ave.NW. Ka.8610 FOOD STORES 22¢ 29c 31c Freshly killed Spiced Cranberry Sauce Order the pork cracked and dressed for a erown roast. Cover the exposed ends of bone with a cube of raw potato to prevent charring. Dust with salt pper, and place in & well oiled baking pan or Roast in & very hot oven (450) for 15 to sear the meat: then reduce the heat to ees, &nd continue roasting, allowing 25 to the pound. Baste every 15 minutes with . For the last half hour il the center with butter or margarine, Arrange on & heated platter, surround with spiced cranberry sauce on orange alices, and garnish with sprigs of cress or parsley. Apple Sauce . . 2% 15¢ Musselman’s brand at a splendid savings Sanico Jelly. 3 wusss 25¢ You know how good it 1s Libby's Peaches . 2 % cans Superbly matched halves of California’s finest Del Monte Peaches 2 = 35¢ cans Extra savings on another popular brand Morton’s Salt 2ues 13¢ “When it rains it pours” White Star Tuna. . 2:29c Cut String Beans 2 .2 15 No. 2 15c Blue Ridge good quality Pink Salmon . . . . =10¢c Again we offer it at a worth-while saving Hershey’s Gocoa . 12¢ can Always a welcome sale Olympia Peas. . . 3:20c Dried, soaked and cooked—good food at a low price Olympia Limas . . 3:20c Can you afford to cook them at this price? Silver Slice ooy 2an23¢ Segments Your old favorite specially priced Sanico Mayonnaise *» 17¢ 8-ounce jar; 10c; quart jar, 29¢ A 3c savings per can! Dressing 8-ounce jar, 10c; quart jar, 25¢ am 25¢ Another week to save on this popular food Salad Bowl o5, . % 15¢ Pork &Beans s, 6 1, Fancy Green Stringless BEANS 2-29 California PEAS Fresh Broccoli . ............ 19¢c 39¢c Sanico Hams Sirloin Steak . . Loin Lamb Chops 39¢ Sanitary’s Franks 25¢ 7 Laundry Soap. 4w 15¢ Full one-pound bars when cut at factory Libby's .5 3 25¢ Carne The popular Winter food ‘Rich Ripe’ Apricots 2 ‘i 49c Whole peeled fruit in a thick syrup First Prize Margarine, , n.17¢ An old favorite back at a pleasingly low price : Nucoa Margarine . 2@=41¢c Now made with 100% pure vegetable oils Hillcrest Peaches. ' 15¢ can Good standard halves—a splendid value 20-0z. Sanico Oats . . 2 {ix 15¢ Still ‘way down in price Sanico Pancake Flour . 2. 15¢ There’s many an enjoyable pancake in this package Stokely’s s 14-02. 405 29¢ Juice Pressed from Stokely-grown finest tomatoes Grapefruit Juice . .’ 10c can Silver Nip with sugar syrup added Sunsweet Prune Juice «.m.23¢ Nature’s own health laxative Treesweet 2. 25¢ Pressed from full tree.ripened oranges Post Toasties . . 2ns 15¢ Serve with sliced bananas and cream FigBars. . . . . . »n10c Keep the cookie jar filled with them Chewing Gum . . 3ns 10c Your choice of Wrigley's or Beechnut half Ib. BREAD 1-1b. loaf Te _sliced loaf | (g 1009, Whole Wheat . . sticedloat {Qg Raisin loat {2¢ Cracked Wheat 'exf (¢ BUTTER Jumbo Roli 42¢ Brookfield .™ 45c¢ Sweet Cream Swift's LandO’Lakes™47¢ EGGS Sanico Fresh Dn;::r::tdeed ..doz., 37C Fresh Breakfast U.cg;“(;?:: ...doz, 45C Orange Juice COFFEE Our Famous Green Bag .™ 25¢ Special ... 19¢ 3le Sanico Coffee ...." Local Grown YORK APPLES 4~15¢ BAKING POTATOES 2™=19¢ California Cauliflower. . 19¢ * 25¢ Iceberg Lettuce .. .. Golden Yellow Carrots. . . Brussels Sprouts New Texas Potatoes ....... Sweet Bunch Turnips ... Bulk Turnips, white or yellow, 3 ™ 10c Delicious Box Apples .......4™ 25¢ Stayman Basket Apples ....4™ 19c Yellow Onions .............4™ 15¢ California Lemons 5 10c =4 6 10c Florlda JUICE ORANGES 3 e e o [ 2nunehu15c e ]5¢z = a5¢ .4™ 25¢ .2bnnrhu15c FLORIDA Strawberries 2 35¢ California NAVEI. OR.ANGES = 20c" % 23c