Evening Star Newspaper, March 21, 1935, Page 13

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EDITOR SEES PERIL 10 FREE SPEECH Bruce Bliven Fears for Rights of Press if Trend Continues. ly un Assoctated Press. )NXVILLE, N. Y., March 21.— 'x‘he opinion that free speech advocates are fighting “what is likely to be & losing battle against the forces of re- pression” was expressed last night by Bruce Bliven, president and editor of the New Republic. ‘With two-thirds of the world’s popu- lation now living under an absolute and rigid censorship, Bliven said it was fair to assume that “we shall presently have to {face the same relationships be- tween Government and the newspaper, the radio and the motion picture that already exist abroad,” Bliven delivered at Sarah Lawrence College the Don Mellett memorial lec- ture for 1935, a lecture founded by newspaper men in hongr of the editor of the Canton (Ohilo) News, who was slain by gangsters in 1926 during his campaign against civic corruption. ‘Flopping’Trend Of Horse Riding Here Is Denied New York Boy’s Story in Court Leads to Counter Charges. BY ROBERT B. PHILLIPS, JR. Is there something slightly quaint about park style horsemanship in ! Washington? The question arcse the other day in a New York magistrate’s court where Irving Kanof, 20, a Long Island Uni- versity student, was on trial for cruelty w nnlmm t.he ehsm being preferred A. agent who saw Klnol ndtng a hnm on Ocean Park- Plrt of the time he was floppmz all over the horse’s neck, and part of time he was hanging from the tail,”" Raymond Mulligan, the complainant, ttnmed. His statements were borne Patrolman John Only in the United States and Great | _ Britain is there a degree of freedom left, Bliven said, and “even in these countries it is my opinion that the danger of suppression, and the number | 220 of instances of jt, grow steadily worse.” He sald the American press, however, was “ m'lkingly free from Government censorship. Declmng the world is at the begin- ning of “an extraordinarily difficult period of transition,” he continued: “To a certain degree, the restrictions that we now see in a rising tide throughout the world are natural, and to be expected, however much we may regret them, and however tragic it may be when they are enforced by the ‘wrong people from the wrong motives.” Bliven said he had examined both sides of the relation between Gov- ernment and journalism in the United States and found thnc neit.her had eny grounds for complal “I am regretfully obllgafl to report that in my judgment,” he said, “most of the cries that the Roosevelt ad- ministration was endangering a free press were not sincere. They resulted from the desire of the publishers, who, after all, are businessmen, with thou- sands of employes, to obtain for them- selves a special position of freedom from the code restriction imposed upon most of the ocher businesses of !ba Unlm State: On the other hand, he said, he found that while some hostile newspapers had misrepresented what the Gov- ernment was trying to do, he expressed the conviction that “the overwhelm ing majority of all news items the lcuvluu at Washington publhhad even in these newspapers have given ® reasonsbly fair and accurate picture.” Office Assistant! Kanof denied evarythlm “I've ridden berore in Washington, B0 d, nnd nobody down to think my style The nunmau said Kanof might be “technically guilty,” but he dismisse the charge and allowed the young man to rett his home in Breoklyn. Riding masters here were in general reluctant to talk when questioned as to whether the neck-: and-nu style would pass unnoticed in Rock Oresk or Potomac Park, but Roland Dawson, instructor at Riding and Hunt Club and the town's best known pro- fessor of equitation, did say he was| sure Kanof learned that kind of horse- manship in Brooklyn and not in Wnshmg!on “You never can tell about these Comanches from Flatbush,” he potn! out. “I remember once huxmng with the Canarsie hounds, there was a man in the fleld who rode backward, nmn. facing ths horse’s tail. I asked why he did that and he :xpmned that when his horse refused and he fell off, he liked to land anywhere but on his face. e Movie Actor’s Auto Seized. HOLLYWOOD, Calif, March 21 () —The automobile of Nils Asther, acreen actor, was seized yesterday on an attachment in connection with a f the| the formal opening of the conven- = &1 ROSSI $98.02 suit for alleged delinquencies in an athletic club account. . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. NEGRO EDUCATORS T0 MEET HERE SOON Collegiate Duu and Registrars ‘° to Open Session at Howard This Month, ‘The tenth annual convention of the National Association of Collegiate Deans and Registrars in Negro Scnools will meet at Howard Uni- versity March 27-30. A the opent: num of the eon"uunn vfll be hlld at the home of Dr. Mord W. Johnson, president of ‘Howard, with the regu- Jar convention next day in lu.nk!n Dean R. the pruldmt of the association, it was expected more than 125 dele- gates will attend. He will at tion March 28. Addresses of teleouu will be given by Dr. Johnson and A. K. Savoy, assistant superintendent in ‘Washington colored ehuxc of the Dr John W. Studebaker, United States commisisoner of education, will make the principal address at the opening evening sesgion. On Friday, March 29, speakers will include Dr. Ben D. Wood of Oolllmbh University Council of !'nucmon, Wumnmn. Attacker Faces Mental Test. LOS ANGELES, March 21 (®).— Superior Judge Ruben Schmidt Tues- day ordered Willlam Hardy, 20, ac- beating his h‘l(-lhur Helm Williams, 8, with a hamms taken to a hospital for a psychopqmic investigation. The girl, badly scarred, will recover, Young Hardy said he belt her because he wanted to keep 2 and his mother believed dogs 'ould make Helen nervous. Asl( forand G ET MARTINI VERMOUTH There is no substitute Imported “by W. A TAYLOR & €O, N.Y, SHITZHLL & CO. FANNIE HURST, whose short stories and best-seller novels are eagerly read by millions, frankly admits that she maintains a large “office 8 O'CLOCK ® Mild and Mellow RED CIRCLE™ Rich and Full Bodied BOKAR Vigorous and Winey CON DOR more delightful Ib. 27C for demi-tasse A&P Coffees are the largest selling coffees in the world and the best money can buy. Sunnyfield Sliced Bacon % m. sks. 19¢ Star Salami Star Thuringer Adams Scrapple Embassy Cottage Cheese. .. m. 14¢ m. 30¢ .m.33¢ Briggs Dated Sausage Meat. Jos. Phillips “gine” Sausage Style Bulk Sauerkraut to Brown D BEEF You'd be proud to 20 oz say you made hash like this PRUDENCE & ¢, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1935. MONEY SAVING PRICES ON AMERICA’'S MOST POPULAR COFFEES EXTRA SPECIAL VALUE! Small, Lean—Half or Whole SMOKED HAMS Center Slices of Ham....... .ib. Swift’s Premium Ovensized Hams ™ 25¢ Armour’s Star Fixed Flavor Roasting Chickens:=%» 29 U. S. Inspected Beef Roasts Tender Chuck Roast ®.21c¢ Briggs Skinless or Reg. Franks . 28¢ Fancy R|b Roasf Ib. 29c Three-Corner Roast ®.25¢ HASH 23c Brown contents lllmu.hly in hot, dry pan, -dd onions if desired. Best way of serving is shake contents from can whole, then cut in slices 34-inch thick, brown each slice on both sides, with a poached egg if desired. Each can contains 4 or 5 generous portions. Serve With Your Corned Beef Hash— Ann Page Ketchup 282 17c; w™13c Sunsweet Prune Juice . . % 19¢ Hershey's Baking Chocolate %t 11c Sparkle Gelatin Sultana Peanut Butter " RITZ S N. B. C. Thin Salted b, or Chaecolate Pudding 4 »= 17c 17" 3lc 19¢ Butter Crackers pkg. or Post ANN PAGE. Borden’s CHEESES American Brick, Chateau, Pimento, Limburger 2. pkes. 3 3¢ Cream Cheese. .2 pkis. 19¢ Swiss, wiss, Buffet m 19c FANCY SEAFOODS Haddock Fillets . . . 1. 15¢ Fresh Buck Shad . . . 19¢ Fresh Roe Shad . b.25¢ Fresh Cleaned Croakers. . .. ». 10¢ Fresh Cleaned Sea Bass Fresh Cleaned Porgies Fresh Cleaned Trout Sliced Salmon m. 25¢; Halibut ». 27¢ Standard Opysters. . . »t. 20c; o 39¢ Select Oysters »t. 30¢; ot 59¢ Salt Mackerel Fillets ». 15¢ WEEK END SPECIAL Sunnybrook 29 No. 1 Fresh Eggs. . “- 23¢ Every A&P egg is specially selected, inspected and guaranteed—Buy A&P eggs today. FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Carton of Doz. Again A&P Offers These Thin Skin Juice ORANGES From Florida 2w 15¢ 18¢ Ann Page Chili Sauce . . ."w" 15¢ Lorna Doone “Sereri. . . Ib. 29c¢ Soaked Peas "tiarm . . 3 am 19¢ Quaker Oats . . . 2 nn 17c we 20c S.0.S. Cleanser . . . . 2 pkss. 23c SUNNYFIELD FLOUR Plain ‘or Self-Rising ¢ 95¢ W 23cave 25¢ w49ty 6 lbs. Plain, in Va., enly 25¢; 5 Ibs. S. R, in Va. also, 23¢ Pillsbury’s Best FLOUR 59 s ve 27¢ 2w e §.15 Yoomy 3lc ———— Your Favorite Flour Specially Priced ' the Land of e Sunshine Kellogg's Corn Flakes Lake Shore Honey sime xume ‘™ Early Ameri: force” to help her—a force consisting of four birds, % i White House Evap. Milk 3 = 20« DOG FOODS Calo—Doggie Dinner Mankind Ken-L-Ration 3 eam 25¢ 6 == 45¢ Marco 2=9c b6=27c 2w |Be b= 40c Cold Stream Pink SALMON tann ean 10¢ Pillsbury Buekwheat or Pancake . . .2 pkgs. 23¢ Ann Page Apple Sauce, 3 &% 25¢ Grandmother's Sliced BREAD ... .m.1eat 7¢ Wilberts’ NO-RUB .pint can 35¢ For Bath Room Fixtures BAB-O ...2 ans 21c Unwrapped Laundry SOAP ....4 1» 15¢ These Prices Effective in Washington and Suburbs Until the Close of Business Saturday, March 23, 1935 three dogs, two cats and a marmoset'! Moreover, Miss Hurst claims that she does her best work when surrounded by these “assistants.” If you like pets, you'll enjoy meeting Anitra (pic- tured above), Lummox, and all the others on Miss California 6 o 18¢ 6 = 20c, 6 *~ 25¢ In Most Stores Larger Floridas doz. 1 9c 25.-29: Fresh Tomatoes Iceberg Lettuce. . New Potatoes Stayman or Winesap Apples. 4 ws 19¢ Hurst’s “staff.” They make their first appearance in print Sunday in our new Colorgravure magazine ..Just one of many fine features. Don’t miss it. P. S Remember~“Laughing Gas,” the new Wodehouse serial, starts in Sunday's magazine...Better order your Sundsy paper mow! next THIS WEEK SUNDAY IN our new @5, AU/ U/e MAGAZINE The Sunday Star In Most Stores Celery bund) IOC Mammoth Decorative = DAHLIA Applesdn25¢| ROOTS Boxed Each Crisp Sweet 5 Potatoes 4 Ibs. 15¢ | Bopular

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